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Age- and Sex-Specific Plasticity in Dopamine Transporter Function Revealed by Food Restriction and Exercise in a Rat Activity-Based Anorexia Paradigm

Eating disorders such as anorexia typically emerge during adolescence, are characterized by engagement in compulsive and detrimental behaviors, and are often comorbid with neuropsychiatric disorders and drug abuse. No effective treatments exist. Moreover, anorexia lacks adolescent animal models, con...

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Autores principales: Gilman, T. Lee, Owens, W. Anthony, George, Christina M., Metzel, Lauren, Vitela, Melissa, Ferreira, Livia, Bowman, Melodi A., Gould, Georgianna G., Toney, Glenn M., Daws, Lynette C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6795746/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31481515
http://dx.doi.org/10.1124/jpet.119.260794
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author Gilman, T. Lee
Owens, W. Anthony
George, Christina M.
Metzel, Lauren
Vitela, Melissa
Ferreira, Livia
Bowman, Melodi A.
Gould, Georgianna G.
Toney, Glenn M.
Daws, Lynette C.
author_facet Gilman, T. Lee
Owens, W. Anthony
George, Christina M.
Metzel, Lauren
Vitela, Melissa
Ferreira, Livia
Bowman, Melodi A.
Gould, Georgianna G.
Toney, Glenn M.
Daws, Lynette C.
author_sort Gilman, T. Lee
collection PubMed
description Eating disorders such as anorexia typically emerge during adolescence, are characterized by engagement in compulsive and detrimental behaviors, and are often comorbid with neuropsychiatric disorders and drug abuse. No effective treatments exist. Moreover, anorexia lacks adolescent animal models, contributing to a poor understanding of underlying age-specific neurophysiological disruptions. To evaluate the contribution of dopaminergic signaling to the emergence of anorexia-related behaviors during the vulnerable adolescent period, we applied an established adult activity-based anorexia (ABA) paradigm (food restriction plus unlimited exercise access for 4 to 5 days) to adult and adolescent rats of both sexes. At the end of the paradigm, measures of plasma volume, blood hormone levels, dopamine transporter (DAT) expression and function, acute cocaine-induced locomotion, and brain water weight were taken. Adolescents were dramatically more affected by the ABA paradigm than adults in all measures. In vivo chronoamperometry and cocaine locomotor responses revealed sex-specific changes in adolescent DAT function after ABA that were independent of DAT expression differences. Hematocrit, insulin, ghrelin, and corticosterone levels did not resemble shifts typically observed in patients with anorexia, though decreases in leptin levels aligned with human reports. These findings are the first to suggest that food restriction in conjunction with excessive exercise sex-dependently and age-specifically modulate DAT functional plasticity during adolescence. The adolescent vulnerability to this relatively short manipulation, combined with blood measures, evidence need for an optimized age-appropriate ABA paradigm with greater face and predictive validity for the study of the pathophysiology and treatment of anorexia. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Adolescent rats exhibit a distinctive, sex-specific plasticity in dopamine transporter function and cocaine response after food restriction and exercise access; this plasticity is both absent in adults and not attributable to changes in dopamine transporter expression levels. These novel findings may help explain sex differences in vulnerability to eating disorders and drug abuse during adolescence.
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spelling pubmed-67957462019-11-01 Age- and Sex-Specific Plasticity in Dopamine Transporter Function Revealed by Food Restriction and Exercise in a Rat Activity-Based Anorexia Paradigm Gilman, T. Lee Owens, W. Anthony George, Christina M. Metzel, Lauren Vitela, Melissa Ferreira, Livia Bowman, Melodi A. Gould, Georgianna G. Toney, Glenn M. Daws, Lynette C. J Pharmacol Exp Ther Neuropharmacology Eating disorders such as anorexia typically emerge during adolescence, are characterized by engagement in compulsive and detrimental behaviors, and are often comorbid with neuropsychiatric disorders and drug abuse. No effective treatments exist. Moreover, anorexia lacks adolescent animal models, contributing to a poor understanding of underlying age-specific neurophysiological disruptions. To evaluate the contribution of dopaminergic signaling to the emergence of anorexia-related behaviors during the vulnerable adolescent period, we applied an established adult activity-based anorexia (ABA) paradigm (food restriction plus unlimited exercise access for 4 to 5 days) to adult and adolescent rats of both sexes. At the end of the paradigm, measures of plasma volume, blood hormone levels, dopamine transporter (DAT) expression and function, acute cocaine-induced locomotion, and brain water weight were taken. Adolescents were dramatically more affected by the ABA paradigm than adults in all measures. In vivo chronoamperometry and cocaine locomotor responses revealed sex-specific changes in adolescent DAT function after ABA that were independent of DAT expression differences. Hematocrit, insulin, ghrelin, and corticosterone levels did not resemble shifts typically observed in patients with anorexia, though decreases in leptin levels aligned with human reports. These findings are the first to suggest that food restriction in conjunction with excessive exercise sex-dependently and age-specifically modulate DAT functional plasticity during adolescence. The adolescent vulnerability to this relatively short manipulation, combined with blood measures, evidence need for an optimized age-appropriate ABA paradigm with greater face and predictive validity for the study of the pathophysiology and treatment of anorexia. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Adolescent rats exhibit a distinctive, sex-specific plasticity in dopamine transporter function and cocaine response after food restriction and exercise access; this plasticity is both absent in adults and not attributable to changes in dopamine transporter expression levels. These novel findings may help explain sex differences in vulnerability to eating disorders and drug abuse during adolescence. The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics 2019-11 2019-11 /pmc/articles/PMC6795746/ /pubmed/31481515 http://dx.doi.org/10.1124/jpet.119.260794 Text en Copyright © 2019 The Author(s). http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY Attribution 4.0 International license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Neuropharmacology
Gilman, T. Lee
Owens, W. Anthony
George, Christina M.
Metzel, Lauren
Vitela, Melissa
Ferreira, Livia
Bowman, Melodi A.
Gould, Georgianna G.
Toney, Glenn M.
Daws, Lynette C.
Age- and Sex-Specific Plasticity in Dopamine Transporter Function Revealed by Food Restriction and Exercise in a Rat Activity-Based Anorexia Paradigm
title Age- and Sex-Specific Plasticity in Dopamine Transporter Function Revealed by Food Restriction and Exercise in a Rat Activity-Based Anorexia Paradigm
title_full Age- and Sex-Specific Plasticity in Dopamine Transporter Function Revealed by Food Restriction and Exercise in a Rat Activity-Based Anorexia Paradigm
title_fullStr Age- and Sex-Specific Plasticity in Dopamine Transporter Function Revealed by Food Restriction and Exercise in a Rat Activity-Based Anorexia Paradigm
title_full_unstemmed Age- and Sex-Specific Plasticity in Dopamine Transporter Function Revealed by Food Restriction and Exercise in a Rat Activity-Based Anorexia Paradigm
title_short Age- and Sex-Specific Plasticity in Dopamine Transporter Function Revealed by Food Restriction and Exercise in a Rat Activity-Based Anorexia Paradigm
title_sort age- and sex-specific plasticity in dopamine transporter function revealed by food restriction and exercise in a rat activity-based anorexia paradigm
topic Neuropharmacology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6795746/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31481515
http://dx.doi.org/10.1124/jpet.119.260794
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