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Brain Res ; 1042(2): 144-59, 2005 May 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15854586

ABSTRACT

The considerable evidence supporting a role for serotonin (5-HT) in the embryonic formation of CNS, mediation of prenatal stress, and pain processing is reviewed. Long-term influences of prenatal 5-HT depletion as well as its combination with prenatal stress effects on tonic nociceptive system in 90-day-old Wistar rats were studied in the formalin test. Pregnant dams were injected with para-chlorophenylalanine (pCPA, 400 mg/kg/2 ml, ip), producing 5-HT depletion during the early period of fetal serotonergic system development. The adult offspring from pCPA-treated dams revealed changes in behavioral indices of persistent pain (flexing + shaking and licking) in the formalin test (2.5%, 50 microl) that were accompanied by irreversible morphological alterations in the dorsal raphe nuclei. In the other series of experiments, the role of 5-HT in the mediation of prenatal stress on the behavioral indices of persistent pain was investigated in the adult offspring from dams with 5-HT depletion followed by restraint stress. Stress during the last embryonic week caused much more increase in flexing + shaking and licking in the second tonic phase of the response to formalin in offspring from pCPA- than saline-treated (control) dams. The former was characterized by alterations in the durations of the interphase, the second phase, and the whole behavioral response too. In offspring from pCPA-treated dams, sex dimorphism was revealed in tonic pain evaluated by licking. Together with our previous results in juvenile rats demonstrating the necessity of definite level of prenatal 5-HT for normal development of tonic nociceptive system, the present pioneering findings obtained in adult rats indicate that prenatal 5-HT depletion causes long-term morphological abnormalities in the dorsal raphe nuclei accompanied by alterations in behavioral indices of tonic pain. Early prenatal 5-HT depletion increases vulnerability of tonic nociceptive circuits to the following prenatal stress.


Subject(s)
Embryonic Development/physiology , Pain Measurement/methods , Pain/metabolism , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects , Serotonin/biosynthesis , Stress, Physiological/metabolism , Animals , Female , Male , Pregnancy , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Serotonin/genetics , Stress, Physiological/genetics
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