Chronic unpredictable stress (CUS)-induced anxiety and related mood disorders in a zebrafish model: altered brain proteome profile implicates mitochondrial dysfunction

Anxiety and depression are major chronic mood disorders, and the etiopathology for each appears to be repeated exposure to diverse unpredictable stress factors. Most of the studies on anxiety and related mood disorders are performed in rodents, and a good model is chronic unpredictable stress (CUS)....

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2013-05, Vol.8 (5), p.e63302-e63302
Hauptverfasser: Chakravarty, Sumana, Reddy, Bommana R, Sudhakar, Sreesha R, Saxena, Sandeep, Das, Tapatee, Meghah, Vuppalapaty, Brahmendra Swamy, Cherukuvada V, Kumar, Arvind, Idris, Mohammed M
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container_title PloS one
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creator Chakravarty, Sumana
Reddy, Bommana R
Sudhakar, Sreesha R
Saxena, Sandeep
Das, Tapatee
Meghah, Vuppalapaty
Brahmendra Swamy, Cherukuvada V
Kumar, Arvind
Idris, Mohammed M
description Anxiety and depression are major chronic mood disorders, and the etiopathology for each appears to be repeated exposure to diverse unpredictable stress factors. Most of the studies on anxiety and related mood disorders are performed in rodents, and a good model is chronic unpredictable stress (CUS). In this study, we have attempted to understand the molecular basis of the neuroglial and behavioral changes underlying CUS-induced mood disorders in the simplest vertebrate model, the zebrafish, Danio rerio. Zebrafish were subjected to a CUS paradigm in which two different stressors were used daily for 15 days, and thorough behavioral analyses were performed to assess anxiety and related mood disorder phenotypes using the novel tank test, shoal cohesion and scototaxis. Fifteen days of exposure to chronic stressors appears to induce an anxiety and related mood disorder phenotype. Decreased neurogenesis, another hallmark of anxiety and related disorders in rodents, was also observed in this zebrafish model. The common molecular markers of rodent anxiety and related disorders, corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF), calcineurin (ppp3r1a) and phospho cyclic AMP response element binding protein (pCREB), were also replicated in the fish model. Finally, using 2DE FTMS/ITMSMS proteomics analyses, 18 proteins were found to be deregulated in zebrafish anxiety and related disorders. The most affected process was mitochondrial function, 4 of the 18 differentially regulated proteins were mitochondrial proteins: PHB2, SLC25A5, VDAC3 and IDH2, as reported in rodent and clinical samples. Thus, the zebrafish CUS model and proteomics can facilitate not only uncovering new molecular targets of anxiety and related mood disorders but also the routine screening of compounds for drug development.
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0063302
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subjects Animals
Anxiety
Anxiety - etiology
Anxiety - metabolism
Anxiety - pathology
Anxiety - psychology
Biology
Biomarkers - metabolism
Brain
Brain - metabolism
Brain - pathology
Brain research
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor
Calcineurin
Corticotropin-releasing hormone
Cyclic AMP
Cyclic AMP response element-binding protein
Danio rerio
Depression (Mood disorder)
Deregulation
Disease Models, Animal
Disorders
Drug development
Exposure
Female
Laboratories
Male
Medical research
Medicine
Mental depression
Mitochondria
Mitochondria - pathology
Molecular biology
Mood
Mood Disorders - etiology
Mood Disorders - metabolism
Mood Disorders - pathology
Mood Disorders - psychology
Neurogenesis
Neurosciences
Oncorhynchus mykiss
Phenotype
Physiology
Protein binding
Proteins
Proteome
Proteomics
Rodentia
Rodents
Scototaxis
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Stress
Stress, Psychological - complications
Stresses
Zebrafish
title Chronic unpredictable stress (CUS)-induced anxiety and related mood disorders in a zebrafish model: altered brain proteome profile implicates mitochondrial dysfunction
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