ABSTRACT
1. Several pharmacological maneuvers in very young rats produce later changes resembling human depression. 2. Rats were submitted to a wide lesion in lateral septal region at 8th day after birth and forced to swim at maturity. 3. Male lesioned group showed the highest amount of immobility; whereas, female sham lesion group showed a greater response to treatments. 4. A gender-dependent sensitivity to early lateral septal nucleus lesions and to antidepressants are concluded.
Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Depression/psychology , Animals , Antidepressive Agents/pharmacology , Brain/anatomy & histology , Defecation/physiology , Female , Male , Motor Activity/physiology , Rats , Sex Characteristics , SwimmingABSTRACT
An increased firing rate in lateral septal nuclei (LSN) appears in urethane-anesthetized rats after several acute drug and non-drug human antidepressant treatments. A still more pronounced increase in firing rate is produced in LSN after clomipramine (CMI) long-term treatment. In spite of urethane is a widely used anesthetic for single unit extracellular recordings, it modifies evoked potentials wave-form. Therefore, present study discards urethane interaction with CMI in LSN single unit extracellular recordings. CMI was acutely injected (1.25 mg/kg: IP) either to urethane-anesthetized, or non-anesthetized encephale-isolé rats. The CMI treated groups showed higher rates of firing in LSN regardless of the use of general anesthesia during recordings. Another group of urethane-anesthetized rats received intracerebroventricular (ICV) microinjections of CMI (100 micrograms/10 microliters/1 min). An amount of 42.8% of LSN-recorded neurons responded with a long-lasting increased firing rate. Results discard urethane and CMI interactions. Additionally, systemic actions of CMI on firing rate of LSN are reproduced by ICV/route microinjections.