4.6 Article

Serotonin transporter genotype x construction stress interaction in rats

Journal

BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 223, Issue 1, Pages 169-175

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2011.04.037

Keywords

Serotonin transporter; Knockout; Construction; Stress; Emotion; Cognition

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) [864.10.003]

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A well-known example for gene x environment interactions in psychiatry is the one involving the low activity (s) allelic variant of the serotonin transporter (5-HTT) promoter polymorphism (5-HTTLPR) that in the context of stress increases risk for depression. In analogy, 5-HTT knockout rodents are highly responsive to early life, but also adult external stressors, albeit conflicting data have been obtained. In our study on emotion and cognition using homozygous 5-HTT knockout (5-HTT-/-) and wild-type (5-HTT+/+) rats we have been confronted with animal facility construction, which were associated with severe lifetime stress (noise and vibrations). To assess the impact of construction stress on well-established 5-HTT-/- rat phenotypes we conducted ad hoc analyses of 5-HTT-/- and 5-HTT+/+ rats that grew up before and during the construction. The reproductive capacity of the parents of the experimental 5-HTT+/- rats was significantly decreased. Further, 5-HTT-/- anxiety-related phenotypes in the elevated plus maze and social interaction tests were abolished after construction noise exposure, due to increased anxiety in 5-HTT+/+ rats and decreased anxiety in 5-HIT-/- rats (social interaction test only). In addition, reversal learning was improved in 5-HTT+/+ and, to a milder extent, decreased in 5-HTT-/- rats. Finally, construction stress genotype-independently increased behavioural despair in the forced swim test. In conclusion, severe construction stress induces 5-HTT genotype-dependent 'for-better-and-for-worse' effects. These data importantly contribute to the understanding of 5-HTT gene x environment interactions and show the risk of losing genotype effects by construction stress. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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