Effects of postweaning undernutrition on exploratory behavior, memory and sensory reactivity in rats: implication of the dopaminergic system.
Author: Alamy M, Errami M, Taghzouti K, Saddiki Traki F, Bengelloun WA.
Source:
Physiology & behavior, 86(1-2), 195-202.
The effects of early undernutrition on behavior and brain biochemistry were
examined in rats. At weaning, rats were provided either an ad lib diet (control
group) or maintained at 80% of the weight of their control littermates
(undernourished group). Three weeks into the diet they were tested in an open
field. After 6 weeks of diet, HPLC analyses were conducted on sample brains from
each group to assess levels of dopamine and metabolites, respectively
dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) and homovanillic acid (HVA) in the striatum.
At seven weeks of diet, remaining rats were trained in an 8-arm radial maze, and
a retention test conducted 72 h after attaining the learning criterion. At
fourteen weeks of diet, sensory reactivity was measured by tail-immersion in a
water bath maintained at constant temperature 50 +/- 1 degrees C. Undernourished
rats exhibited hyperactivity and increased exploratory behavior in the open
field, as well as increased sensory reactivity in the tail flick test. In the
radial maze, however, undernourished rats did not differ from controls in either
learning or retention. Haloperidol (i. p. injection) impaired retention by
control but not undernourished animals. HPLC analyses showed an increase in
dopamine turnover in the striatum of undernourished rats. Our results suggest
that, unlike its effects when induced immediately at birth or in adulthood,
undernutrition at weaning does not appear to influence learning and retention but
induced an hyperactivity and alterations in striatal DA turnover which was
associated with a decrease in responsiveness to i. p. haloperidol injection.