An effort toward molecular biology of food deprivation induced food hoarding in gonadectomized NMRI mouse model: focus on neural oxidative status.
Noushin NikrayIsaac KarimiZahraminoosh SiavashhaghighiLora A BeckerMohammad Mehdi MofattehPublished in: BMC neuroscience (2018)
Although, food deprivation-induced hoarding behavior is a strategic response to food shortage in mice, it did not induce the same amount of hoarding across all colony mates. Hoarding behavior, in this case, is a response to the environmental uncertainty of food shortage, therefore is not an abnormal behavior. Hoarding behavior induced neural OS with regard to an increase in brain glutathione levels but failed to show other markers of neural OS. Decreased superoxide dismutase activity in brain and spinal cord tissues and increased malondialdehyde levels in brain tissues of gonadectomized mice could be a hallmark of debilitated antioxidative defense and more lipid peroxidation due to reduced amount of gonadal steroid hormones during aging.
Keyphrases
- obsessive compulsive disorder
- human health
- spinal cord
- high glucose
- diabetic rats
- white matter
- mouse model
- resting state
- gene expression
- drug induced
- risk assessment
- spinal cord injury
- multiple sclerosis
- oxidative stress
- type diabetes
- nitric oxide
- functional connectivity
- adipose tissue
- neuropathic pain
- insulin resistance
- wild type