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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 1, 2001, 21(1):262-269
Enhanced Cortical Extracellular Levels of Cholecystokinin-Like
Material in a Model of Anticipation of Social Defeat in the Rat
Chrystel
Becker1,
Marie-Hélène
Thiébot1,
Yvan
Touitou2,
Michel
Hamon1,
François
Cesselin1, 2, and
Jean-Jacques
Benoliel1, 2
1 Institut National de la Santé et de la
Recherche Médicale U. 288, NeuroPsychoPharmacologie
Moléculaire, Cellulaire et Fonctionnelle, and
2 Service de Biochimie Médicale, Faculté de
Médecine Pitié-Salpêtrière, 75634 Paris Cedex
13, France
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ABSTRACT |
The involvement of cholecystokinin (CCK) in the mechanisms of
stress and/or anxiety was assessed by in vivo
microdialysis in rats subjected to a social stress paradigm. During the
initial 30 min period of each conditioning session, a male Sprague
Dawley rat (intruder) was placed in a protective cage inside the cage of a male Tryon Maze Dull rat (resident), allowing unrestricted visual,
olfactory, and auditory contacts but precluding close physical contact
between them. During the following 15 min period, both the protective
cage and the resident were removed (nondefeated intruders) or only the
protective cage was removed allowing the resident to attack the
intruder (defeated rats). This procedure was repeated once daily for
4 d. On the fifth day, a guide cannula was implanted into the
prefrontal cortex of intruders. During a single 30 min test session,
performed 4 d later, intruders were subjected to only the 30 min
protected confrontation to the resident. Anxiety-like behavior
(immobility, ultrasonic vocalizations, and defensive postures),
associated with an increase (approximately +100% above baseline) in
cortical outflow of CCK-like material (CCKLM), were observed in
defeated intruders. Pretreatment with diazepam (5 mg/kg, i.p.), but not
buspirone (0.5-2 mg/kg, i.p.), prevented both the anxiety-related
behavior and CCKLM overflow. The selective CCK-B receptor antagonist
CI-988 (2 mg/kg, i.p.) reduced the anxiety-like behavior without
affecting the increase in CCKLM outflow. These data indicate that
anticipation of social defeat induces a marked activation of cortical
CCKergic neurons associated with anxiety-related behaviors in rats.
Key words:
CCK; in vivo microdialysis; frontal cortex; anticipation of social defeat; anxiolytics; stress; anxiety
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INTRODUCTION |
A large body of evidence supports
the proposal that cholecystokinin (CCK) plays an important role in the
neurobiological mechanisms of stress and/or anxiety. To date, two types
of specific receptors, named CCK-A and CCK-B, are known to mediate the
actions of this neuropeptide. Although CCK-A receptors are found
primarily in the periphery, they are also present in a few brain areas
(area postrema, interpeduncular nucleus, and nucleus of the solitary tract). On the other hand, CCK-B receptors are almost exclusively expressed in the CNS (Noble et al., 1999 ). Sulfated CCK-8 (CCK-8S) and
other CCK-B receptor agonists, such as the tetrapeptide CCK-4, possess
anxiogenic-like properties in various species (van Megen et al.,
1996 ). In humans, administration of CCK-4 has been reported to provoke
attacks in panic subjects (Bradwejn et al., 1990 ) and healthy
volunteers (de Montigny, 1989 ). Conversely, selective CCK-B receptor
antagonists produced anxiolytic-like effects in various animal
paradigms (such as plus-maze and social interaction) (van Megen
et al., 1996 ; Shlick et al., 1997 ; Daugé and Léna, 1998 )
and prevented CCK-4 from inducing panic attacks in humans (Bradwejn et
al., 1994 ).
CCK-containing neurons are widely distributed throughout the brain,
especially in corticolimbic structures such as the frontal cortex
(Beinfeld et al., 1981 ; Marley et al., 1984 ; Iadarola et al., 1989 ).
Increases in the tissue concentrations of CCK and the density of CCK
receptors have been consistently reported in the cerebral cortex of
rats subjected to anxiogenic situations (Siegel et al., 1984 ; Brodin et
al., 1989 ; Harro et al., 1990 , 1992 ; Vasar et al., 1993 ). Additionally,
cortical extracellular CCK concentrations increased in rats subjected
to stressful or anxiogenic-like stimuli (Nevo et al., 1996 ; Becker et
al., 1999 ). However, the experimental paradigms used in these studies
did not permit the assessment of a causal link between increased
cortical CCK outflow and behavior. The aim of the present study was to fill in this gap by quantifying both the cortical CCK release and the
behavior of rats subjected to a relevant stressful paradigm.
Social defeat, which results from exposure of a male rat to social
agonistic encounters, is a situation frequently met in the natural
habitat (Koolhaas et al., 1997 ). Convergent data have demonstrated that
a social-aggressive encounter induces physiological evidence of
stress, including elevations in plasma ACTH and corticosterone levels,
increased heart rate and body temperature, and altered activity of
neurochemically identified systems in brain (Miczek et al., 1991 ;
Albonetti and Farabollini, 1994 ; Tornatzky and Miczek, 1994 ; Tidey and
Miczek, 1996 ; Keeney and Hogg, 1999 ). Thus, this procedure can be
considered as an appropriate model for the analysis of changes
associated with social stress in rats.
The present paradigm was designed to study concomitantly the
conditioned behavioral and biochemical consequences of the anticipation of social defeat. This was achieved by repeatedly subjecting
experimental intruder rats to the threats by an aggressive conspecific
resident, before being physically attacked and defeated. The effects of clinically efficient or putative anxiolytics on both behavioral parameters and cortical CCK release were examined under these experimental conditions.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals
Male Sprague Dawley rats (Centre d'Élevage R. Janvier, Le
Genest-St-Isle, France), weighing 250-300 gm, served as the
experimental "intruder" animals. They were placed in
individual cages (45 × 25 × 17 cm) for 10 d
before the beginning of the experiments. Male Tryon Maze Dull S3 (TMD)
rats (University of Limburg, Maastricht, The Netherlands), weighing
500-600 gm, served as "resident" rats in agonistic encounters.
They were housed singly from weaning (at 3 weeks of age) in appropriate
cages (45 × 45 × 17 cm). TMD rats are known as being
spontaneously territorially aggressive animals and thereby dominant
against intruders (Koolhaas et al., 1990 ). Ten TMD rats were used for
the whole series of experiments performed in these studies. All animals
were kept under controlled environmental conditions (22 ± 1°C,
60% relative humidity, 12 hr light/dark cycle, food and water ad
libitum). Procedures involving animals and their care were all
conducted in conformity with the institutional guidelines that are in
compliance with national and international laws and policies (council
directive #87-848 from the Ministère de l'Agriculture et de la
Forêt, Service Vétérinaire de la Santé et de la
Protection Animale).
Social defeat
Procedure. The behavioral procedure consisted of four
daily conditioning sessions and one test session that involved the same pairs of residents and intruders. The 45 min conditioning sessions were
divided into two consecutive periods. During period I (30 min),
intruders were placed singly in a protective cage without cover
(25 × 25 × 30 cm) inside the resident home cage. The
resident home cage had no cover and was surrounded by a 100-cm-high
wire-mesh enclosure (45 × 45 cm). The protective cage allowed
unrestricted visual, auditory, and olfactory contacts with the resident
but precluded close physical contact (Fig.
1). During period II (15 min), the
protective cage was removed. After the fourth conditioning session,
i.e., the fifth day, intruders were implanted with a guide cannula (see
below). Four days later, the experimental intruders implanted with the
microdialysis probe (see below) were subjected to a single test session
that consisted of a 30 min protected confrontation only.

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Figure 1.
Social defeat stress procedure. A,
Conditioning sessions. During period I (30 min), the intruder was
placed in a protective cage inside the home cage of resident. The
protective cage allowed unrestricted visual, auditory, and olfactory
contacts with the resident but precluded close physical contact. Then
the protective cage was removed, allowing the resident to attack the
intruder (period II, 15 min). B, The experimental
procedure consisted of four daily conditioning sessions
(D1-D4) and one test session (D9)
that involved the same pairs of residents and intruders. A
microdialysis guide cannula was implanted on day 5. On day 9 in the
course of the microdialysis study, intruders were subjected to a single
test session that consisted of a 30 min protected confrontation to
resident (period I only).
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Intruder rats were divided into two groups. During period II of each
session, the resident was either present, allowing physical confrontation with the intruder (defeated intruders), or removed, while
the intruder had access to the entire resident home cage (nondefeated
intruders). Therefore, the nondefeated intruders were never physically
attacked and defeated by the resident.
Behavioral quantification. The duration of immobility and 22 kHz ultrasonic vocalizations (USV) and the total number of rearings, wall-climbings (i.e., ascending the protective wire-mesh partition), and defensive-submissive postures (i.e., upright posture) were directly observed during period I of the four conditioning sessions and
during the test session. USV were detected using a Batbox III (CEBA, Le
Verdier, France), and behaviors were measured by two experienced
observers who were blind to the treatment conditions.
Behavioral data were analyzed by two-way (subjects, sessions or
subjects, drugs) ANOVAs followed, as appropriate, by pairwise comparisons using the Dunn's t test with the error variance
term from ANOVAs.
Microdialysis
To estimate the in vitro recovery of CCK-like
material (CCKLM), dialysis membrane was immersed at room temperature in
an artificial CSF (aCSF) containing 0.25 or 0.50 ng/ml CCK-8S (Bachem,
Bubendorf, Switzerland) and continuously perfused with aCSF at 3.0 µl/min. Two fractions (corresponding to 90 µl each, 30 min) were
collected for each probe at each concentration of CCK-8S. The collected fractions, as well as 90 µl aliquots of the original solutions, were
assayed for their CCKLM content by the radioimmunoassay (RIA) procedure
described below. The relative recovery of a probe was calculated as the
percentage of CCKLM quantified in the microdialysates over that present
in the original solution. For the two CCK-8S concentrations tested,
this ratio was constant: 8.2 ± 0.4% (mean ± SEM;
n = 22). When the bath concentration of CCK-8S was
changed from 0.25 to 0.50 ng/ml, equilibrium was reached within the 30 min collection period after this change.
Twenty-four hours after the fourth conditioning session, intruders were
anesthetized with chloral hydrate (375 mg/kg, i.p.) and positioned in a
stereotaxic frame (David Kopf Instruments, Tujunga, CA). The
skull was exposed, and a 1 mm diameter hole was drilled for the descent
of a stainless steel guide cannula (CMA/12; outer diameter, 0.7 mm; CMA
Microdialysis, Stockholm, Sweden) with a "dummy probe." Descent was
made down to the following coordinates for the tip of the guide cannula
just above the frontal cortex: anteroposterior, +2.7 mm from bregma;
lateral, 1.7 mm from bregma; height, 0.8 mm from the skull
(Paxinos and Watson, 1986 ). The cannula was then secured with dental
cement to the skull, and the skin was sutured. Animals were allowed to
recover from the surgery in individual cages for 4 d before the
microdialysis experiment.
The day before the experiment, rats were placed in a Plexiglas
microdialysis bowl (35 cm in diameter) with access to food and water
ad libitum. The next morning, the dummy probe was
removed, and a microdialysis probe (CMA/12; cutoff, 20,000 Da; outer
diameter, 0.5 mm; 2 mm in length; CMA Microdialysis) was introduced
into the guide cannula so as to protrude by 2 mm into the frontal
cortex (Nevo et al., 1996 ). The probe was continuously perfused at a flow rate of 3.0 µl/min with aCSF (in mM: 146 NaCl, 3.0 KCl, 1.2 CaCl2, 1.0 MgCl2, 1.9 Na2HPO4, and 0.1 NaH2PO4, final pH 7.4) supplemented with bovine serum albumin (BSA) [0.025% w/v (Sigma, St.
Louis, MO)] and peptidase inhibitors [0.03% w/v, bacitracin (Janssen, Geel, Belgium) and 0.1% w/v, polypep (Sigma)]. To allow dialysis to reach steady state around the membrane probe, perfusion was
performed for 90 min (washout period) before collection of the first
fraction (Nevo et al., 1996 ). In all experiments, 11 fractions of 90 µl (each corresponding to 30 min of perfusion) were collected at
0°C and then immediately frozen at 30°C until the determination
of their CCKLM content using the RIA procedure described below.
During the microdialysis procedure, 118 min after collection of the
first fraction, i.e., 2 min before collecting the fifth fraction,
intruders (either defeated or nondefeated) were subjected to the
behavioral test session. Each rat was gently moved to the protective
cage placed inside the usual resident home cage for the 30 min test
session and then back to the microdialysis bowl. This was done without
having to detach the swivel arm. Thus, during the microdialysis
procedure, intruders were threatened, but not defeated, by the resident.
At the end of the experiment, animals were deeply anesthetized with
chloral hydrate and decapitated. Brains were removed and immediately
frozen in isopentane cooled by dry ice. Placement of microdialysis
probes was verified by histological examination. When the probe was
incorrectly placed, the corresponding results were discarded (in only 2 of the 73 intruders used in the studies).
Drugs and treatments. The benzodiazepine receptor agonist
diazepam (5 mg/kg; Hoffmann-La Roche, Basel, Switzerland), the
selective CCK-B receptor antagonist CI-988 [2 mg/kg; Parke-Davis, Ann
Arbor, MI (Hughes et al., 1990 )], or the 5-HT1A
receptor agonist buspirone [0.5, 1.0, and 2.0 mg/kg; Bristol-Myers
Squibb, Wallingford, CT) (Hamon, 1997 )], were administered
intraperitoneally to the intruder 30 min before its protected
introduction into the resident home cage. The benzodiazepine receptor
antagonist flumazenil [10 mg/kg, i.p.; Hoffmann-La Roche (Hunkeler et
al., 1981 )] was injected 5 min before the administration of diazepam.
Buspirone was diluted in saline (0.9% w/v NaCl). Diazepam, flumazenil,
and CI-988 were prepared as a suspension in acacia gum in distilled
water. Intruders that received vehicle (3 ml/kg) were treated according
to the same protocol.
CCKLM radioimmunoassay. The buffer used for preparing
[125I]human gastrin solution (2000 Ci/mmol; CIS Bio International, Gif-sur-Yvette, France) and charcoal
suspension was 50 mM barbital-HCl, pH 8.5, containing 1 gm/l sodium azide and 10 mM
MgCl2. The anti-CCK-8 antiserum was obtained in a
rabbit injected repeatedly with CCK-8 coupled to thyroglobulin by
glutaraldehyde (Studler et al., 1981 ). For the measurement of CCKLM in
microdialysates, 90 µl fractions were incubated with 100 µl of an
anti-CCK antiserum solution [in barbital-HCl buffer containing 3.75 gm/l BSA; 1/1,500,000 final dilution (Benoliel et al., 1992 )] and 50 µl of barbital-HCl buffer. After a 48 hr incubation at 4°C, 50 µl
of the [125I]gastrin tracer solution
(corresponding to 2000-2500 cpm) was added, and incubation proceeded
for an additional 20-24 hr. The assay was stopped by adsorbing the
free tracer onto active dextran T70-coated charcoal (4 and 40 gm/l,
respectively, in the barbital-HCl buffer containing 10% horse serum; 1 ml of the suspension per tube). The tubes were immediately centrifuged
at 6000 × g for 10 min at 4°C, and the radioactivity
in the supernatants was estimated by gamma spectrometry. Standard
curves were prepared from RIAs of standard solutions of 0.5-50 pg/tube
of authentic CCK-8S in 50 µl of the barbital-HCl buffer supplemented
with BSA. These aliquots were mixed with 90 µl of aCSF and 100 µl
of the antiserum dilution, and RIAs then proceeded as described above.
The detection limit of the assay was 0.75 pg of CCK-8S per tube, and
half displacement of [125I]gastrin bound
to antibodies was obtained with ~10 pg of the peptide.
Under these RIA conditions, the cross-reactivity was 233% with
nonsulfated CCK-8, 204% with gastrin, 31% with CCK-7S, 26% with
nonsulfated CCK-7, 25% with CCK-5, 11% with CCK-33, and 1% with
CCK-4, and was undetectable with rat -calcitonin gene-related peptide (up to 2.5 µg/tube) compared with 100% for synthetic
CCK-8S.
The CCKLM content of each fraction was expressed as CCK equivalents,
i.e., the amount of authentic CCK-8S producing the same displacement of
the radioiodinated tracer bound to anti-CCK antibodies as the
endogenous material. These values were not corrected for probe recovery
calculated from in vitro experiments with authentic CCK-8S.
The effects of treatments were assessed by expressing the levels of
CCKLM in each fraction collected after the treatment as a percentage of
the mean levels of the peptide in the first three fractions collected
immediately after the washout period. CCKLM in each fraction was
compared with baseline level using paired Student's t test
(two-tailed). Comparison between treated versus control groups for each
fraction was made using one-way (drug) ANOVA followed, as appropriate,
by the Dunn's t test with the error variance term from ANOVA.
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RESULTS |
Motor and social behavior of intruders during the four conditioning
sessions of repeated defeat
During period I of the first conditioning session, i.e., before
the first defeat episode, the intruders displayed high levels of
activity as indicated by numerous rearings, wall-climbings, and short
immobility duration (Fig.
2A). USV and
defensive-submissive postures were absent. During period II, when the
protective cage was removed, intruders were immediately attacked and
defeated by the residents. Defeat was indicated by full submissive
posture, with the intruder laying motionless on its back with ventral
surface exposed to the resident. The submissive postures seemed to
reduce or suppress the resident aggressive behavior. Indeed, a total of
three to four attacks (<10 sec each) only occurred during the 15 min
period II, and intruders were only exceptionally wounded. These animals
(only 3 of the 73 intruders used in these studies) were not included in
the data reported herein.

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Figure 2.
A, Behavioral responses of defeated
rats during four consecutive conditioning sessions of social stress.
Comparison with nondefeated intruders. Behavior of intruders was
quantified during the 30 min period I of each conditioning session,
when they were placed in a protective cage inside the home cage of
residents (i.e., before removing the protective cage for 15 min, period
II). The duration of immobility and USV and the number of
defensive-submissive postures, rearings, and wall-climbings were
measured for the entire period I (30 min). No significant changes were
noted between the successive sessions for nondefeated intruders; only
the data corresponding to the fourth session [(4)] are
shown. Data are the means ± SEM of parameters recorded in eight
defeated and six nondefeated intruders. *p < 0.01 versus defeated intruders on day 1; p < 0.05 versus defeated intruders on day 2; p < 0.01 versus nondefeated intruders on day 4. B, Effects of a
30 min protected exposure to resident rats during the microdialysis
test session on the behavioral responses of defeated or nondefeated
intruders. During the microdialysis experiment, i.e., on the ninth day
of the protocol illustrated in Figure 1B,
behavior of intruders was recorded for the 30 min protected exposure to
residents. The five parameters were quantified as described above. Each
bar is the mean ± SEM of data obtained in eight defeated and six
nondefeated intruders. *p < 0.01 versus
nondefeated intruders.
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During period I of the next three conditioning sessions (days 2-4),
the defeated intruders were significantly less active (reduction of
rearings and wall-climbings) than on the first session. In addition,
they displayed defensive-submissive postures and emitted USV. These
behaviors developed progressively over the successive sessions. The
values of immobility, USV, and rearings measured during the fourth
session were significantly different from those recorded during the
second session.
In contrast, in nondefeated intruders, none of the behavioral
parameters significantly varied during the four conditioning sessions
(data not shown). In particular, on the fourth session, these animals
displayed a lower level of immobility, a larger number of rearings and
wall-climbings compared with defeated intruders, and no
defensive-submissive postures or USV. Indeed, the values of all these
parameters were not significantly different from those measured on the
first conditioning session in the to-be defeated intruders.
Motor and social behavior of intruders during the microdialysis
test session
Compared with behavioral parameters quantified during period I of
the fourth conditioning session, there were no significant variations
in those recorded during the microdialysis (fifth) test session (Fig.
2, compare A, B). During the 30 min observation period, this behavior consisted primarily of immobility (session 4, 23.81 ± 0.99 min vs session 5, 25.73 ± 1.51 min; means ± SEM; n = 8; NS), USV (25.21 ± 0.74 vs
24.77 ± 1.01 min; NS), defensive-submissive postures (13.75 ± 1.53 vs 9.40 ± 1.57; NS), rearings (5.57 ± 1.16 vs 5.40 ± 1.21; NS), and wall-climbings (0.39 ± 0.24 vs
0.00 ± 0.00; NS). These five behavioral parameters recorded
during the test session were significantly different from those
quantified in nondefeated intruders (n = 6):
immobility, 4.25 ± 1.35 min; numbers of rearings, 17.21 ± 2.82; wall-climbings, 16.63 ± 1.14; no USV and no
submissive-defensive postures (Fig. 2B). The latter values were not significantly different from those measured in the same
animals on the fourth conditioning session and on the first day in both
the to-be defeated and nondefeated intruders.
Extracellular cortical levels of CCKLM in intruders
The spontaneous CCKLM outflow (i.e., fractions 1-3 measured
120-30 min before exposure to resident) in defeated intruders was not significantly different from that measured in nondefeated intruders (1.35 ± 0.13 pg of CCK equivalents per fraction;
mean ± SEM; n = 8; vs 1.39 ± 0.08;
n = 6, respectively) (Fig.
3).

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Figure 3.
Effects of a 30 min protected exposure to
residents on extracellular cortical levels of CCKLM in defeated or
nondefeated intruders. Cortical CCKLM levels were measured for 120 min
before, during (fraction 5), and 180 min after the 30 min exposure
(arrow) of defeated (n = 8; ) or
nondefeated (n = 6; ) intruders to residents.
Data are the means ± SEM of CCKLM contents of collected
fractions, expressed as percentages of basal values, taken as the mean
of fractions 1-3. Fraction 1 is the first fraction collected after a
90 min washout period after probe insertion. *p < 0.001 with respect to basal values.
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When defeated intruders were placed into the protective cage inside the
home cage of the resident, a significant elevation of CCKLM
extracellular levels was observed in the corresponding (fifth)
microdialysate fraction (+99 ± 12%; p < 0.001;
n = 8). Subsequently, CCKLM levels returned to basal
values and remained stable until the end of the experiment. In
nondefeated intruders, introduction into the home cage of the resident
did not significantly modify cortical CCKLM outflow.
Effects of diazepam, buspirone, or CI-988 on behavior and
extracellular CCKLM levels
Behavior
Injection of saline or suspension of acacia gum in distilled
water, 30 min before the 30 min protected confrontation, did not
significantly affect the behavior of both defeated and nondefeated intruders compared with noninjected intruders (Table
1, Fig. 2B).
In nondefeated intruders, diazepam (5 mg/kg, i.p.) significantly
decreased the number of rearings and wall-climbings and lengthened immobility time. These effects were completely prevented by flumazenil (10 mg/kg, i.p., 5 min before diazepam), which, on its own,
significantly affected none of the five behavioral parameters measured
(data not shown). Similarly, CI-988 (2 mg/kg, i.p.) (Table 1) and
buspirone at three different doses (0.5, 1.0 and 2.0 mg/kg, i.p., 30 min before the protected confrontation) (data not shown) did not
significantly change these parameters.
In defeated intruders, diazepam significantly reduced the duration of
USV and the number of submissive-defensive postures, whereas the
numbers of wall-climbings and rearings were increased when compared
with acacia gum-injected intruders. These effects were completely
prevented by flumazenil (Table 1), which, on its own, affected none of
the five behavioral parameters quantified in the defeated intruders
(data not shown). The CCK-B receptor antagonist CI-988 significantly
reduced the time spent immobile and vocalizing, as well as the number
of defensive-submissive postures, and enhanced rearings and
wall-climbings (Table 1). Indeed, for defeated intruders treated with
diazepam or CI-988, the values of all the measured parameters were not
significantly different from those recorded in their nondefeated
counterparts (except the duration of vocalization in CI-988-treated
animals) (Table 1). In contrast, buspirone (0.5, 1.0, and 2.0 mg/kg,
i.p.) did not significantly alter any of the five behavioral parameters in defeated intruders (data not shown).
Extracellular cortical levels of CCKLM in intruders
In both nondefeated (data not shown) and defeated intruders,
neither saline, acacia gum, diazepam, buspirone, nor CI-988 affected the extracellular cortical levels of CCKLM before the protected confrontation to the resident (fraction 4) (Fig.
4).

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Figure 4.
Effects of diazepam (± flumazenil), buspirone, or
CI-988 on cortical CCKLM outflow in defeated intruders subjected to a
30 min protected exposure to residents. A, Diazepam (5 mg/kg, i.p.; n = 8; ), CI-988 (2 mg/kg, i.p.;
n = 10; ), or acacia gum (n = 7; ) was administered (small filled arrow) 30 min
before the 30 min protected exposure to residents (corresponding to
fraction 5; large filled arrow). Flumazenil (10 mg/kg, i.p.; n = 6; ) was administered 5 min before diazepam. B, Buspirone [0.5 mg/kg
(n = 6; ), 1.0 mg/kg (n = 10; ), or 2.0 mg/kg (n = 6; )] or saline
(n = 7; ) was injected intraperitoneally 30 min
before the 30 min protected exposure to residents. Data are the
means ± SEM of CCKLM contents of collected fractions, expressed
as percentages of basal values, taken as the mean of fractions 1-3.
Fraction 1 is the first sample collected after a 90 min wash-out period
after probe insertion. *p < 0.01;
**p < 0.001 with respect to basal values (100%).
p < 0.05;  p < 0.001 with respect to corresponding values for defeated intruders given
acacia gum.
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In defeated intruders, acacia gum or saline did not modify
stress-induced CCKLM overflow (compare Figs. 3,
4A,B). In contrast, diazepam
completely abolished the increase in CCKLM contents in the fraction
(fifth) collected during the 30 min protected confrontation to the
resident (Fig. 4A). As illustrated in Figure
4A, flumazenil pretreatment (inactive on its own)
(data not shown) prevented the effect of diazepam, and stress-induced
CCKLM overflow in defeated intruders treated with the combination of
these two drugs did not significantly differ from that measured in
defeated intruders injected with the vehicle only. Similarly, CCKLM
overflow was unaltered in defeated intruders treated with either CI-988
(Fig. 4A) or buspirone (at 0.5, 1.0, and 2.0 mg/kg)
(Fig. 4B) compared with vehicle-treated defeated intruders.
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DISCUSSION |
The present study shows that the anticipation of social defeat
increased cortical CCKergic neurotransmission in rats. This effect
seems in relation to stress and/or anxiety because the protocol used
herein produced behaviors that could be related to this state.
Moreover, the increase of cortical extracellular levels, as well as the
anxiety-related behaviors, could be prevented by the potent anxiolytic
drug diazepam, whereas the CCK-B receptor antagonist CI-988 reduced the
behaviors only. That the 5-HT1A receptor agonist
buspirone had no effect on behavioral responses and CCKLM release
associated with anticipation of social defeat suggests that this drug
did not possess anxiolytic properties in this paradigm. All of these
data show the existence of a close parallelism between the activation
of cortical CCKergic neurotransmission and stress and/or anxiety-driven
behavior in defeated rats.
The experimental procedure used in the present study was essentially
based on that described by Miczek and his coworkers (Tornatzky and
Miczek, 1994 ; Tidey and Miczek, 1996 ), who established that the
paradigm consisting of confrontations between an intruder and a
resident rat on 4 consecutive days represents a social stress that
offers the advantages of ecological and ethological validity. The major
difference that we introduced in this paradigm is the timeline during
the four conditioning sessions. In the procedure described by Miczek
and his coworkers, intruders were placed in a protective cage after the
defeat, whereas, in the present study, the 30 min protected session
always preceded the defeat. Therefore, this procedure allowed us to
investigate the anticipation of the defeat (psychosocial stress).
During the first exposure of the intruder, in a protective cage, to the
resident, the intruder clearly displayed exploratory behavior as
evidenced by numerous rearings and wall-climbings. In contrast, from
the second session onward, rats defeated during period II of the
preceding session exhibited clear-cut changes in behavior; rearings
progressively declined and wall-climbings almost completely
disappeared, whereas the immobility time progressively lengthened. In
addition, the defeated intruders adopted defensive-submissive postures
and emitted USV for a long duration. In rats subjected to the same
protected confrontation, but not to the physical defeat by the resident
(nondefeated intruders), none of the locomotor or social behaviors
significantly changed throughout the five successive social encounters.
In defeated intruders, the reduction of exploratory behavior cannot be
accounted for by habituation because it was not observed in nondefeated
intruders. During agonistic encounters with the resident animals
(period II), the defeated intruders emitted USV in conjunction with
defensive and submissive behavior (data not shown). In contrast, no USV
were recorded before the first defeat. The appearance of USV in period
I as soon as on the second conditioning session emphasizes the
importance of the socially relevant context to generate USV. USV,
particularly at low frequency (20-30 kHz), are emitted in response
to various anxiogenic events, including social defeat
(Sales, 1972 ; de Vry et al., 1993 ; Vivian and Miczek, 1993 ; Tornatzky
and Miczek, 1994 ). In line with this interpretation, Blanchard et al.
(1991) reported that the presentation of a cat to a rat led the latter
to produce USV (22 kHz) that occurred over the same period as freezing.
On the other hand, previous studies (Vivian and Miczek, 1993 ; Tornatzky and Miczek, 1994 ) established that defensive-submissive postures can
be related to state of fear and/or anxiety.
View this table:
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Table 1.
Effects of diazepam, flumazenil plus diazepam, or CI-988 on
the behavioral responses of nondefeated (ND) or defeated (D) intruders
during a 30 min protected exposure to a resident, in the course of the
microdialysis test session
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The behavior exhibited by the defeated intruders during the
anticipation of defeat on the fifth experimental session did not significantly differ from that noted on the fourth confrontation session performed 4 d before. Indeed, on the microdialysis day, the protected confrontation of the intruders to the resident resulted in submissive-defensive postures, USV, and almost complete suppression of motor or exploratory behavior. These behaviors were associated with
a marked increase in extracellular CCKLM levels in the frontal cortex.
This effect lasted for the 30 min confrontation only, because CCKLM
outflow returned to the baseline value and remained stable thereafter,
up to the end of the experiment. In nondefeated intruders, neither
behavior nor extracellular CCKLM levels were affected by the protected
confrontation to the residents. This strongly suggests that the
behavioral responses and the increase in cortical CCKLM outflow in
defeated intruders could be attributed to the anticipatory "fear"
of encountering an animal that had previously attacked and defeated them.
We have shown previously that exposure to other uncontrollable aversive
stimuli, such as restraint stress, yohimbine administration, or ether
inhalation, induced an increase in cortical CCKLM release in rats (Nevo
et al., 1996 ; Becker et al., 1999 ). In the present study, the fact that
the enhanced CCKLM outflow was observed during the anticipatory phase
of a defeat episode and was abolished by the established anxiolytic
diazepam further strengthens the anxiety-like interpretation of the
situation. Furthermore, diazepam treatment also produced a marked
decrease in the vocalization time and the number of
defensive-submissive postures and an increased number of rearings and
wall-climbings. These effects were actually attributable to the
stimulation of benzodiazepine receptors because they were prevented by
the benzodiazepine receptor antagonist flumazenil at a dose (10 mg/kg,
i.p.) that blocks diazepam-induced behaviors (Ida et al., 1985 ; Rowlett
and Woolverton, 1996 ; Matto et al., 1997 ). In line with the present
data, diazepam, reported to act on the motivational or threat intensity
dimension, was already shown to reduce vocalization in the Fear/Defense
Test Battery (Blanchard et al., 1990 ) and in a social stress paradigm
in rats (Tornatzky and Miczek, 1991 ). The fact that the increased time spent immobile in defeated intruders was not reversed by diazepam might
be accounted for by the sedative effect of this benzodiazepine (Haefely
et al., 1981 ). Accordingly, immobility was clearly lengthened in
nondefeated intruders given diazepam, and this effect could be
prevented by flumazenil.
In contrast to diazepam, the 5-HT1A receptor
agonist buspirone, at doses (0.5-2.0 mg/kg, i.p.) known to possess
anxiolytic properties in some paradigms (Griebel, 1995 ), prevented
neither the behavioral manifestations nor the enhancement of cortical extracellular CCKLM levels that accompanied the anticipation of a
defeat episode. The lack of effect of buspirone on both behavioral and
biochemical parameters indicated that the increased release of CCK did
not result from some excitatory influence of 5-HT acting at
5-HT1A receptors. We showed previously that
buspirone (1 mg/kg, i.p.) counteracted the increase in cortical
extracellular CCKLM levels induced by restraint stress or
administration of the anxiogenic compound yohimbine (Becker et al.,
1999 ). This would indicate that the anxiolytic-like effects of
5-HT1A receptor agonists depend on the
anxiogenic-stress procedure used and sustains the opinion that
conflict paradigms are less sensitive to the action of these compounds
than unconditioned models (Griebel, 1995 ).
To investigate whether CCKLM overflow could be responsible, at least
partly, for the behavioral responses in defeated intruders during the
30 min protected exposure to the resident, we attempted to prevent
these responses by blocking CCK receptors. Although CI-988 has rather
poor bioavailability and blood-brain barrier permeability, we chose
this antagonist because it possesses a nanomolar affinity for CCK-B
receptors and exhibits a good selectivity for CCK-B over CCK-A
receptors (Noble et al., 1999 ). Indeed, numerous convergent studies
previously demonstrated that the anxiogenic effects of CCK are mediated
through the stimulation of CCK-B receptors (see references in the
introductory remarks). The administration of CI-988 affected neither
the spontaneous outflow of CCKLM nor the stress-induced CCKLM overflow
in the frontal cortex of intruders, thereby suggesting that CCK release
from CCKergic terminals may not be controlled by CCK autoreceptors.
However, CI-988 markedly reduced all of the anxiety-like behaviors in
defeated intruders. Thus, among the five parameters measured, only USV
duration did not return to control values in CI-988-pretreated animals.
Indeed, although still longer than in nondefeated intruders, the
duration of USV was significantly reduced in CI-988-pretreated compared with nontreated defeated intruders. At the dose used in our studies, 2 mg/kg intraperitoneally, CI-988 exerts clear-cut anxiolytic-like effects in various paradigms (Singh et al., 1991 ; Izumi et al., 1996 ;
Adamec et al., 1997 ). Accordingly, the present results further support
the idea that the activation of cortical CCKergic neurotransmission closely paralleled stress- and/or anxiety-driven behaviors in rats. It
can be reasonably assumed that CCK itself contributed to these
behaviors because they could be significantly reduced by the blockade
of the actions of the peptide by CI-988.
In conclusion, the present study showed that anticipation of social
defeat produces an anxiety-like state that is associated with an
increase in cortical CCKergic neurotransmission. Furthermore, the
latter event appeared to be probably involved in the genesis of
anxiety-like behaviors. The experimental paradigm used herein should be
suitable for both investigating the implication of other neuronal
systems in anticipatory fear and assessing the potential anxiolytic
properties of drugs.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Aug. 10, 2000; revised Oct. 2, 2000; accepted Oct. 9, 2000.
This research was supported by grants from Institut National de la
Santé et de la Recherche Médicale and Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation (Unrestricted Biomedical Research Grant). C.B. was recipient
of a fellowship from the Ministère de l'Education Nationale, de
l'Enseignement Supérieur et de la Recherche during performance of this work. We are grateful to Dr. D. Le Bars and Dr. C. Spielewoy for helpful discussions, B. Zeau for excellent technical assistance, and pharmaceutical companies for generous gifts of buspirone
(Bristol-Myers Squibb, Wallingford, CT) and CI-988 (Parke-Davis, Ann
Arbor, MI).
Correspondence should be addressed to Jean-Jacques Benoliel, Institut
National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale U. 288, NeuroPsychoPharmacologie Moléculaire, Cellulaire et
Fonctionnelle, Faculté de Médecine
Pitié-Salpêtrière, 75634 Paris Cedex 13, France. E-mail: benoliel{at}ccr.jussieu.fr.
 |
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