Assessing the effects of stress on feeding behaviors in laboratory mice

Author:

Francois Marie1ORCID,Canal Delgado Isabella1,Shargorodsky Nikolay1ORCID,Leu Cheng-Shiun12,Zeltser Lori13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Naomi Berrie Diabetes Center, Division of Molecular Genetics, Columbia University Irving Medical Center

2. Department of Biostatistics, Columbia University Irving Medical Center

3. Department of Pathology and Cell Biology, Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Abstract

Stress often affects eating behaviors, increasing caloric intake in some individuals and decreasing it in others. The determinants of feeding responses to stress are unknown, in part because this issue is rarely studied in rodents. We focused our efforts on the novelty-suppressed feeding (NSF) assay, which uses latency to eat as readout of anxiety-like behavior, but rarely assesses feeding per se. We explored how key variables in experimental paradigms – estrous and diurnal cyclicity, age and duration of social isolation, prandial state, diet palatability, and elevated body weight – influence stress-induced anxiety-like behavior and food intake in male and female C57BL/6J mice. Latency to eat in the novel environment is increased in both sexes across most of the conditions tested, while effects on caloric intake are variable. In the common NSF assay (i.e., lean mice in the light cycle), sex-specific effects of the length of social isolation, and not estrous cyclicity, are the main source of variability. Under conditions that are more physiologically relevant for humans (i.e., overweight mice in the active phase), the novel stress now elicits robust hyperphagia in both sexes . This novel model of stress eating can be used to identify underlying neuroendocrine and neuronal substrates. Moreover, these studies can serve as a framework to integrate cross-disciplinary studies of anxiety and feeding related behaviors in rodents.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health

Klarman Family Foundation

Russell Berrie Foundation

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

Reference62 articles.

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