Running from depression: the antidepressant-like potential of prenatal and pre-pubertal exercise in adolescent FSL rats exposed to an early-life stressor
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Cambridge University Press
Abstract
Objective: We aimed to answer the questions of whether early-life (perinatal and/or juvenile)
exercise can induce antidepressant-like effects in a validated rodent model of depression, and
whether such early-life intervention could prevent or reverse the adverse effects of early-life
stress in their offspring. Methods: Male and female Flinders sensitive line rats born to a dam that
exercised during gestation, or not, were either maternally separated between PND02 and 16 and
weaned on PND17 or not. Half of these animals then underwent a fourteen-day low-intensity
exercise regimen from PND22. Baseline depressive-like behaviour was assessed on PND21 and
then reassessed on PND36, whereafter hippocampal monoamine levels, redox state markers
and metabolic markers relevant to mitochondrial function were measured. Results: Pre-pubertal
exercise was identified as the largest contributing factor to the observed effects, where it
decreased immobility time in the FST by 6%, increased time spent in the open arms of the EPM
by 9%. Hippocampal serotonin and norepinephrine levels were also increased by 35% and 26%,
respectively, whilst nicotinic acid was significantly decreased. Conclusion: These findings
suggest that pre-pubertal low-intensity exercise induces beneficial biological alterations that
could translate into antidepressant behaviour in genetically susceptible individuals.
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Citation
Whitney AJ, Lindeque Z, Kruger R, and Steyn SF. (2023) Running from depression: the antidepressant-like potential of prenatal and pre-pubertal exercise in adolescent FSL rats exposed to an early-life stressor. Acta Neuropsychiatrica 1–15.[https://doi.org/10.1017/neu.2023.52]