GeneSet Information

Tier IV GS380536 • Differential Expression of Genes Between NS and CRS Rats in the Hippocampus

DESCRIPTION:

The testing of different hypotheses of the etiology of depression was performed. Both non-stressed and chronic restraint stressed rats were observed to determine the differential expression of genes in populations of Wistar-Kyoto rats. 126 genes within the hippocampus were determined to be differential between the two testing conditions.

LABEL:

DiffExp_Hipp_NSvCRS

SCORE TYPE:

P-Value

DATE ADDED:

2020-04-26

DATE UPDATED:

2024-04-25

SPECIES:

AUTHORS:

Andrus BM, Blizinsky K, Vedell PT, Dennis K, Shukla PK, Schaffer DJ, Radulovic J, Churchill GA, Redei EE

TITLE:

Gene expression patterns in the hippocampus and amygdala of endogenous depression and chronic stress models.

JOURNAL:

Molecular psychiatry Jan 2012, Vol 17, pp. 49-61

ABSTRACT:

The etiology of depression is still poorly understood, but two major causative hypotheses have been put forth: the monoamine deficiency and the stress hypotheses of depression. We evaluate these hypotheses using animal models of endogenous depression and chronic stress. The endogenously depressed rat and its control strain were developed by bidirectional selective breeding from the Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rat, an accepted model of major depressive disorder (MDD). The WKY More Immobile (WMI) substrain shows high immobility/despair-like behavior in the forced swim test (FST), while the control substrain, WKY Less Immobile (WLI), shows no depressive behavior in the FST. Chronic stress responses were investigated by using Brown Norway, Fischer 344, Lewis and WKY, genetically and behaviorally distinct strains of rats. Animals were either not stressed (NS) or exposed to chronic restraint stress (CRS). Genome-wide microarray analyses identified differentially expressed genes in hippocampi and amygdalae of the endogenous depression and the chronic stress models. No significant difference was observed in the expression of monoaminergic transmission-related genes in either model. Furthermore, very few genes showed overlapping changes in the WMI vs WLI and CRS vs NS comparisons, strongly suggesting divergence between endogenous depressive behavior- and chronic stress-related molecular mechanisms. Taken together, these results posit that although chronic stress may induce depressive behavior, its molecular underpinnings differ from those of endogenous depression in animals and possibly in humans, suggesting the need for different treatments. The identification of novel endogenous depression-related and chronic stress response genes suggests that unexplored molecular mechanisms could be targeted for the development of novel therapeutic agents. PUBMED: 21079605
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Annotation Information

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Depression (D003863)
developmental process (GO:0032502)
monoamine molecular messenger (CHEBI:25375)
calcium(0) (CHEBI:29320)
monoamine (CHEBI:63534)
sexual interaction trait (VT:0002566)
archicortex (UBERON:0002961)
exoskeleton (UBERON:0006611)
Ammon's horn (UBERON:0001954)
hippocampal formation (UBERON:0002421)
multicellular organism (UBERON:0000468)

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