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1.
Front Plant Sci ; 13: 999793, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36311080

ABSTRACT

Big-sized trees, species diversity, and stand density affect aboveground biomass in natural tropical and temperate forests. However, these relationships are unclear in arid natural forests and plantations. Here, we hypothesized that large plants (a latent variable of tall-stature and big-crown, which indicated the effect of big-sized trees on ecosystem function and structure) enhance aboveground biomass in both arid natural forests and plantations along the gradients of climate water availability and soil fertility. To prove it, we used structural equation modeling (SEM) to test the influences of large plants located in 20% of the sequence formed by individual size (a synthetical value calculated from tree height and crown) on aboveground biomass in natural forests and plantations while considering the direct and indirect influences of species diversity as well as climatic and soil conditions, using data from 73 natural forest and 30 plantation plots in the northwest arid region of China. The results showed that large plants, species diversity, and stand density all increased aboveground biomass. Soil fertility declined aboveground biomass in natural forest, whereas it increased biomass in plantation. Although climatic water availability had no direct impact on aboveground biomass in both forests, it indirectly controlled the change of aboveground biomass via species diversity, stand density, and large plants. Stand density negatively affects large plants in both natural forests and plantations. Species diversity positively affects large plants on plantations but not in natural forests. Large plants increased slightly with increasing climatic water availability in the natural forest but decreased in plantation, whereas soil fertility inhibited large plants in plantation only. This study highlights the extended generality of the big-sized trees hypothesis, scaling theory, and the global importance of big-sized tree in arid natural forests and plantations.

2.
Psychoneuroendocrinology ; 132: 105353, 2021 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34271522

ABSTRACT

Consolation is a complex empathic behavior that has recently been observed in some socially living rodents. Despite the growing body of literature suggesting that stress affects some simple form of empathy, the relationship between stress and consolation remains largely understudied. Using monogamous mandarin voles, we found that an acute restraint stress exposure significantly reduced consolation-like behaviors and induced anxiety-like behaviors. Along with these behavioral changes, corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) and CRF receptor 1 (CRFR1) neurons were activated within the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and prelimbic cortex (PrL) but not within the infralimbic cortex (IL). Chemogenetic activation of CRF neurons in the ACC and PrL, recaptured acute stress-induced behavioral dysfunctions. We further observed that intracellular PKA and PKC signaling pathways mediate CRF-induced behavioral dysfunctions, but they work in a regional-specific, sex-biased manner. Together, these results suggest that the local CRF-CRFR1 system within the ACC and PrL is involved in the consolation deficits and anxiety induced by acute stress.


Subject(s)
Arvicolinae , Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone , Stress, Psychological , Animals , Arvicolinae/metabolism , Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone/metabolism , Gyrus Cinguli/metabolism , Prefrontal Cortex/metabolism , Receptors, Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone/metabolism
3.
Eur Neuropsychopharmacol ; 45: 15-28, 2021 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33730683

ABSTRACT

Physical inactivity, the fourth leading mortality risk factor worldwide, is associated with chronic mental illness. Identifying the mechanisms underlying different levels of baseline physical activity and the effects of these levels on the susceptibility to stress is very important. However, whether different levels of baseline physical activity influence the susceptibility and resilience to chronic social defeat stress (CSDS), and the underlying mechanisms in the brain remain unclear. The present study segregated wild-type mice into low baseline physical activity (LBPA) and high baseline physical activity (HBPA) groups based on short term voluntary wheel running (VWR). LBPA mice showed obvious susceptibility to CSDS, while HBPA mice were resilient to CSDS. In addition, the expression of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) was lower in LBPA mice than in HBPA mice. Furthermore, activation of TH neurons in the VTA of LBPA mice by chemogenetic methods increased the levels of VWR and resilience to CSDS. In contrast, inhibiting TH neurons in the VTA of HBPA mice lowered the levels of VWR and increased their susceptibility to CSDS. Thus, this study suggests that different baseline physical activities might be mediated by the dopamine system. This system also affects the susceptibility and resilience to CSDS, possibly via alteration of the baseline physical activity. This perspective on the neural control and impacts on VWR may aid the development of strategies to motivate and sustain voluntary physical activity. Furthermore, this can maximize the impacts of regular physical activity toward stress-reduction and health promotion.


Subject(s)
Dopaminergic Neurons , Social Defeat , Animals , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Motor Activity , Stress, Psychological , Tyrosine 3-Monooxygenase , Ventral Tegmental Area
4.
J Ethnopharmacol ; 269: 113718, 2021 Apr 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33352239

ABSTRACT

ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE: Ferula sinkiangensis K. M. Shen is a traditional Chinese medicine that has a variety of pharmacological properties relevant to neurological disorders and inflammations. Kellerin, a novel compound extracted from Ferula sinkiangensis, exerts a strong anti-neuroinflammatory effect by inhibiting microglial activation. Microglial activation plays a vital role in ischemia-induced brain injury. However, the potential therapeutic effect of kellerin on focal cerebral ischemia is still unknown. AIM OF THE STUDY: To explore the effect of kellerin on cerebral ischemia and clarify its possible mechanisms, we applied the middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) model and the LPS-activated microglia model in our study. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Neurological outcome was examined according to a 4-tiered grading system. Brain infarct size was measured using TTC staining. Brain edema was calculated using the wet weight minus dry weight method. Neuron damage and microglial activation were observed by immunofluorescence in MCAO model in rats. In in vitro studies, microglial activation was examined by flow cytometry and the viability of neuronal cells cultured in microglia-conditioned medium was measured using MTT assay. The levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines were measured by qRT-PCR and ELISA. The proteins involved in NF-κB signaling pathway were determined by western blot. Intracellular ROS was examined using DCFH-DA method and NADPH oxidase activity was measured using the NBT assay. RESULTS: We found that kellerin improved neurological outcome, reduced brain infarct size and decreased brain edema in MCAO model in rats. Under the pathologic conditions of focal cerebral ischemia, kellerin alleviated neuron damage and inhibited microglial activation. Moreover, in in vitro studies of LPS-stimulated BV2 cells kellerin protected neuronal cells from being damaged by inhibiting microglial activation. Kellerin also reduced the levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines, suppressed the NF-κB signaling pathway, and decreased ROS generation and NADPH oxidase activity. CONCLUSIONS: Our discoveries reveal that the neuroprotective effects of kellerin may largely depend on its inhibitory effect on microglial activation. This suggests that kellerin could serve as a novel anti-inflammatory agent which may have therapeutic effects in ischemic stroke.


Subject(s)
Anti-Inflammatory Agents/pharmacology , Brain Ischemia/drug therapy , Ferula/chemistry , Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery/drug therapy , Neuroprotective Agents/pharmacology , Plant Extracts/pharmacology , Animals , Anti-Inflammatory Agents/therapeutic use , Brain Edema/drug therapy , Brain Ischemia/etiology , Brain Ischemia/pathology , Cell Line, Transformed , Cell Line, Tumor , Cytokines/metabolism , Disease Models, Animal , Humans , Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery/etiology , Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery/pathology , Inflammation/drug therapy , Lipopolysaccharides/toxicity , Mice , Microglia/drug effects , Microglia/pathology , NADPH Oxidases/antagonists & inhibitors , NF-kappa B p50 Subunit/antagonists & inhibitors , Neurons/drug effects , Neuroprotective Agents/therapeutic use , Plant Extracts/therapeutic use , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Signal Transduction/drug effects
5.
Huan Jing Ke Xue ; 41(8): 3804-3810, 2020 Aug 08.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33124357

ABSTRACT

The impact of exogenous carbon input changes on forest soil respiration provides the basis for an intensive analysis of the forest carbon cycle. Based on a plant residue addition and removal control experiment, this study investigated the short-term soil respiration response to carbon input changes of Picea schrenkiana on the Tianshan Mountains during their growing season with five different carbon input treatments:control, double litter, no root, no litter, and no input. The results revealed that, during the entire observation period, the cumulative soil respiration rates were 3.38, 3.94, 2.65, 2.87, and 2.01 µmol·(m2·s)-1 in the double litter, control, no litter, no root, and no input treatments, respectively. Compared with the control treatment, the cumulative soil CO2 efflux increased by 402.65 g·m-2 in the double litter treatment, whereas it decreased by 515.00, 354.73, and 967.15 g·m-2 in the no litter, no root, and no input treatments, respectively. The mineral soil respiration, litterfall respiration, and root respiration contributed 59.46%, 21.49%, and 14.79%, respectively, to the total soil respiration rate. PCA analysis revealed that the soil respiration rate was positively correlated with the soil temperature, soil moisture, soil total phosphorus content, pH, and soil organic carbon content, and negatively correlated with the soil bulk density, while the soil total nitrogen content, carbon nitrogen ratio, and soil electrical conductivity had no effect on the soil respiration rate.


Subject(s)
Picea , Soil , Carbon/analysis , Carbon Cycle , China , Forests
6.
Int J Neuropsychopharmacol ; 23(8): 511-523, 2020 11 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31760433

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Consolation is a type of empathy-like behavior that has recently been observed in some socially living rodents. Despite the growing body of literature suggesting that stress affects empathy, the relationship between stress and consolation remains understudied at the preclinical level. Here, we examined the effects of chronic emotional stress or physical stress exposure on consolation and emotional behaviors by using the socially monogamous mandarin vole (Microtus mandarinus) in both males and females. METHOD/RESULTS: Physical stress voles were exposed to 14-day social defeat stress, whereas emotional stress voles vicariously experienced the defeat of their partners. We found that physical stress, but not emotional stress, voles showed reduced grooming toward their defeated partners and increased anxiety- and despair-like behaviors. Meanwhile, physical stress voles exhibited decreased neural activity in the anterior cingulate cortex, which is centrally involved in empathy. The densities of oxytocin receptors, dopamine D2 receptors, and serotonin 1A-receptors within the anterior cingulate cortex were significantly decreased in the physical stress group compared with controls. All the behavioral and physiological changes were similar between the sexes. Finally, we found that the reduced consolation behavior and some anxiety-like syndromes in physical stress voles could be alleviated by pretreatment with an oxytocin receptor, D2 receptors, or serotonin 1A-receptor agonist within the anterior cingulate cortex, whereas injections of corresponding receptor antagonists to the control voles decreased the consolation behavior and increased some anxiety-like behaviors. CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicated that chronic physical stress exposure impaired consolation and induced anxiety-like behaviors in mandarin voles and oxytocin receptors, 5-HT1A receptors, and D2 receptors within the anterior cingulate cortex may play important roles in these processes.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal , Empathy , Gyrus Cinguli/metabolism , Oxytocin/metabolism , Receptor, Serotonin, 5-HT1A/metabolism , Receptors, Dopamine D2/metabolism , Social Defeat , Stress, Psychological/metabolism , Stress, Psychological/psychology , Aggression , Animals , Arvicolinae , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Disease Models, Animal , Female , Gyrus Cinguli/drug effects , Gyrus Cinguli/physiopathology , Housing, Animal , Male , Neurotransmitter Agents/pharmacology , Signal Transduction , Stress, Psychological/physiopathology , Time Factors
7.
Front Neurosci ; 13: 256, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31019446

ABSTRACT

Voluntary exercise has been reported to have a therapeutic effect on many psychiatric disorders and social stress is known to impair social interaction. However, whether voluntary exercise could reverse deficits in social behaviors induced by chronic social defeat stress (CSDS) and the underlying mechanism remain unclear. The present study shows CSDS impaired social preference and induced social interaction deficiency in susceptible mice. Voluntary wheel running (VWR) reversed these effects. In addition, CSDS decreased the levels of tyrosine hydroxylase in the ventral tegmental area and the D2 receptor (D2R) in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) shell. These changes can be recovered by VWR. Furthermore, the recovery effect of VWR on deficits in social behaviors in CSDS mice was blocked by the microinjection of D2R antagonist raclopride into the NAc shell. Thus, these results suggest that the mechanism underlying CSDS-induced social interaction disorder might be caused by an alteration of the dopamine system. VWR may be a novel means to treat CSDS-induced deficits in social behaviors via modifying the dopamine system.

8.
Psychoneuroendocrinology ; 103: 14-24, 2019 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30605804

ABSTRACT

Consolation, which entails comforting contact directed toward a distressed party, is a common empathetic response in humans and other species with advanced cognition. Here, using the social defeat paradigm, we provide empirical evidence that highly social and monogamous mandarin voles (Microtus mandarinus) increased grooming toward a socially defeated partner but not toward a partner who underwent only separation. This selective behavioral response existed in both males and females. Accompanied with these behavioral changes, c-Fos expression was elevated in many of the brain regions relevant for emotional processing, such as the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, paraventricular nucleus (PVN), basal/basolateral and central nucleus of the amygdala, and lateral habenular nucleus in both sexes; in the medial preoptic area, the increase in c-Fos expression was found only in females, whereas in the medial nucleus of the amygdala, this increase was found only in males. In particular, the GAD67/c-Fos and oxytocin (OT)/c-Fos colocalization rates were elevated in the ACC and PVN, indicating selective activation of GABA and OT neurons in these regions. The "stressed" pairs matched their anxiety-like behaviors in the open-field test, and their plasma corticosterone levels correlated well with each other, suggesting an empathy-based mechanism. This partner-directed grooming was blocked by pretreatment with an OT receptor antagonist or a GABAA receptor antagonist in the ACC but not by a V1a subtype vasopressin receptor antagonist. We conclude that consolation behavior can be elicited by the social defeat paradigm in mandarin voles, and this behavior may be involved in a coordinated network of emotion-related brain structures, which differs slightly between the sexes. We also found that the endogenous OT and the GABA systems within the ACC are essential for consolation behavior in mandarin voles.


Subject(s)
Oxytocin/metabolism , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/metabolism , Amygdala/metabolism , Animals , Anxiety , Arvicolinae/physiology , Corticosterone/metabolism , Emotions/physiology , Empathy/genetics , Female , GABA-A Receptor Antagonists/pharmacology , Grooming/physiology , Gyrus Cinguli/metabolism , Male , Paraventricular Hypothalamic Nucleus/metabolism , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fos/metabolism , Receptors, Oxytocin/metabolism , Receptors, Vasopressin/metabolism , Social Behavior , Stress, Psychological
9.
Huan Jing Ke Xue ; 37(4): 1516-22, 2016 Apr 15.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27548977

ABSTRACT

We analyzed the differentiation among the environmental factors and soil organic/inorganic carbon contents of irrigated desert soil, brown desert soil, saline soil and aeolian sandy soil by classical statistics methods, and studied the correlation between soil carbon contents and the environmental factor by redundancy analysis (RDA) in a typical oasis of Yutian in the southern edge of the Tarim Basin. The results showed that the average contents of soil organic carbon and soil inorganic carbon were 2.51 g · kg⁻¹ and 25.63 g · kg⁻¹ respectively. The soil organic carbon content of the irrigated desert soil was significantly higher than those of brown desert soil, saline soil and aeolian sandy soil, while the inorganic carbon content of aeolian sandy soil was significantly higher than those of other soil types. The soil moisture and nutrient content were the highest in the irrigated desert soil and the lowest in the aeolian sandy sail. All soil types had high degree of salinization except the irrigated desert soil. The RDA results showed that the impacts of environmental factors on soil carbon contents ranked in order of importance were total nitrogen > available phosphorus > soil moisture > ground water depth > available potassium > pH > total salt. The soil carbon contents correlated extremely significantly with total nitrogen, available phosphorus, soil moisture and ground water depth (P < 0.01), and it correlated significantly with available potassium and pH (P < 0.05). There was no significant correlation between soil carbon contents and other environmental factors (P > 0.05).


Subject(s)
Carbon/analysis , Desert Climate , Soil/chemistry , Groundwater/analysis , Nitrogen/analysis , Phosphorus/analysis , Soil/classification
10.
PLoS One ; 9(10): e109071, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25275494

ABSTRACT

The hydraulic redistribution (HR) of deep-rooted plants significantly improves the survival of shallow-rooted shrubs and herbs in arid deserts, which subsequently maintain species diversity. This study was conducted in the Ebinur desert located in the western margin of the Gurbantonggut Desert. Isotope tracing, community investigation and comparison analysis were employed to validate the HR of Populus euphratica and to explore its effects on species richness and abundance. The results showed that, P. euphratica has HR. Shrubs and herbs that grew under the P. euphratica canopy (under community: UC) showed better growth than the ones growing outside (Outside community: OC), exhibiting significantly higher species richness and abundance in UC than OC (p<0.05) along the plant growing season. Species richness and abundance were significantly logarithmically correlated with the P. euphratica crown area in UC (R²â€Š= 0.51 and 0.84, p<0.001). In conclusion, P. euphratica HR significantly ameliorates the water conditions of the shallow soil, which then influences the diversity assembly in arid desert communities.


Subject(s)
Populus/physiology , Water , China , Plant Roots/physiology , Populus/classification , Species Specificity
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