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Publication : A model of social stress in dominant mice: effects on sociosexual behaviour.

First Author  D'Amato FR Year  2001
Journal  Physiol Behav Volume  73
Issue  3 Pages  421-6
PubMed ID  11438370 Mgi Jnum  J:71521
Mgi Id  MGI:2150262 Doi  10.1016/s0031-9384(01)00460-7
Citation  D'Amato FR, et al. (2001) A model of social stress in dominant mice: effects on sociosexual behaviour. Physiol Behav 73(3):421-6
abstractText  The possibility of socially stressing the dominant/aggressive member of a pair of male mice is tested. Male mice (NMRI outbreed strain) were housed in pairs to assess dominant and subordinate roles by agonistic interactions and urine-marking test. Social stress for dominant males consisted in 30 min/day of exposure to their subordinate partner interacting with a female in the adjacent compartment of the cage, for 9 days. Results showed that dominance status was maintained. Behavioural observations indicated that neither the subordinates nor the dominant males habituated to this experimental procedure. At the end of the chronic stress, dominant animals were given the opportunity to interact for 30 min with a female in their compartment. Results indicated that stressed dominants showed impairment in their sexual behaviour and were more oriented towards the physical environment in comparison with control dominants. The behavioural response to apomorphine (0.25 mg/kg) indicated an alteration of the dopaminergic functioning in socially stressed dominant mice. This study suggests that the characteristics of the stressor and the effects of the chronic social stress could be different, according to male social status.
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