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Behavior. --- Enrichment. --- Environmental enrichment. --- Level. --- Stereotyped behavior.
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The present study evaluated whether environmental enrichment-related effects on the development of stereotyped behavior in deer mice were associated with alterations in neurotrophin levels. Deer mice were reared in enriched or standard cage conditions for 60 days. The mice were then tested in automated photocell detectors and classified as either stereotypic or nonstereotypic. This testing paradigm yielded four behaviorally distinct groups: enriched stereotypic, enriched nonstereotypic, standard cage stereotypic, and standard cage nonstereotypic. The motor cortex, striatum, and hippocampus were dissected, and the levels of brain-derived neurotrophin factor (BDNF) and nerve growth factor (NGF) in each brain region were analyzed using Promega ELISA kits. There were no differences in either NGF or BDNF in either the motor cortex or the hippocampus. In the striatum, the enriched nonstereotypic mice exhibited significantly more BDNF than the enriched stereotypic, the standard cage nonstereotypic, or the standard cage stereotypic mice. There were no differences in NGF in the striatum. These results provide evidence that the enrichment-related prevention of stereotyped behavior in deer mice is associated with increased BDNF in the striatum
Behavior. --- Brain. --- Cage. --- Cortex. --- Deer mice. --- Deer. --- Development. --- Elisa. --- Enriched. --- Enrichment. --- Environmental enrichment. --- Group. --- Growth. --- Hippocampus. --- Level. --- Mice. --- Ngf. --- Prevention. --- Stereotyped behavior. --- Stereotypic. --- Striatum.
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The present study evaluated whether environmental enrichment-related effects on the development of stereotyped behavior in deer mice were associated with alterations in neurotrophin levels. Deer mice were reared in enriched or standard cage conditions for 60 days. The mice were then tested in automated photocell detectors and classified as either stereotypic or nonstereotypic. This testing paradigm yielded four behaviorally distinct groups: enriched stereotypic, enriched nonstereotypic, standard cage stereotypic, and standard cage nonstereotypic. The motor cortex, striatum, and hippocampus were dissected, and the levels of brain-derived neurotrophin factor (BDNF) and nerve growth factor (NGF) in each brain region were analyzed using Promega ELISA kits. There were no differences in either NGF or BDNF in either the motor cortex or the hippocampus. In the striatum, the enriched nonstereotypic mice exhibited significantly more BDNF than the enriched stereotypic, the standard cage nonstereotypic, or the standard cage stereotypic mice. There were no differences in NGF in the striatum. These results provide evidence that the enrichment-related prevention of stereotyped behavior in deer mice is associated with increased BDNF in the striatum. (C) 2003 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
Bank voles. --- Behavior. --- Brain. --- Cage. --- Complex environment. --- Cortex. --- Deer mice,stereotypy,enriched,ngf,bdnf,elisa. --- Deer mice. --- Deer. --- Development. --- Elisa. --- Enriched. --- Enrichment. --- Environmental enrichment. --- Frontal-cortex. --- Group. --- Growth. --- Hippocampus. --- Induced jumping stereotypy. --- Laboratory mice. --- Level. --- Mental-retardation. --- Messenger-rna. --- Mice. --- Ngf. --- Prevention. --- Rat-brain. --- Sex-differences. --- Stereotyped behavior. --- Stereotypic. --- Striatum.
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Activity. --- Behavior. --- Enrichment. --- Environmental enrichment. --- Neuronal. --- Stereotyped behavior.
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We evaluated whether environmental enrichment-related effects on the development of stereotyped behavior in deer mice were associated with alterations in dendritic morphology. Deer mice were reared under enriched or standard housing conditions and then tested in automated photocell detectors and classified as stereotypic or nonstereotypic. Dendritic morphology was assessed in layer V pyramidal neurons of the motor cortex, medium spiny neurons of the dorsolateral striatum, and granule cells of the dentate gyrus using Golgi-Cox histochemistry. Enriched nonstereotypic mice exhibited significantly higher dendritic spine densities in the motor cortex and the striatum than enriched stereotypic or standard-cage mice. Significant increases in dendritic arborization following environmental enrichment also were observed. These results suggest that the enrichment-related prevention of stereotyped behavior is associated with increased dendritic spine density. (C) 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc
Amphetamine. --- Bank voles. --- Behavior. --- Complex environments. --- Cortex. --- Deer mice. --- Deer. --- Density. --- Dentate gyrus. --- Development. --- Differential experience. --- Enriched. --- Enrichment. --- Environmental enrichment. --- Frontal-cortex. --- Golgi-cox,repetitive behavior,deer mice,brain. --- Housing conditions. --- Housing. --- Increase. --- Increases. --- Mice. --- Morphology. --- Neurons. --- Plasticity. --- Prevention. --- Rat-brain. --- Sex-differences. --- Stereotyped behavior. --- Stereotypic. --- Striatum.
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The present study evaluated whether environmental enrichment-related effects on the development of stereotyped behavior in deer mice were associated with alterations in neuronal metabolic activity. Deer mice were reared under either enriched or standard housing conditions for 60 days following weaning. All mice were then placed in automated photocell detectors and classified as either stereotypic or non-stereotypic. Neuronal metabolic activity was then assessed using cytochrome oxidase (CO) histochemistry. The results demonstrated that environmental enrichment significantly increased neuronal metabolic activity in the motor cortex. Furthermore, non-stereotypic mice exhibited significantly more CO activity than stereotypic mice in the cortex, striatum, nucleus accumbens, thalamus, hippocampus and amygdala. This latter effect was due to the enriched mice as evidenced by a significant interaction between housing condition and behavioral status in the cortex, striatum, nucleus accumbens, thalamus and hippocampus. Thus, the observed increase in CO activity reflected increased neuronal metabolic activity in non-stereotypic enriched mice relative to stereotypic enriched mice. These results suggest that, in a developmental model of spontaneous stereotypy, the enrichment-related prevention of stereotyped behavior is associated with increased CO activity. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved
Accumbens. --- Activity. --- Amygdala. --- Bank voles. --- Basal ganglia. --- Behavior. --- Brain variations. --- Cortex. --- Cytochrome oxidase,repetitive behavior,mouse,brain. --- Cytochrome-oxidase activity. --- Deer mice. --- Deer. --- Development. --- Enriched. --- Enrichment. --- Environmental enrichment. --- Hippocampus. --- Housing conditions. --- Housing. --- Increase. --- Interaction. --- Lurcher mutant. --- Macaque striate cortex. --- Mice. --- Model. --- Motor coordination. --- Neuronal. --- Nonhuman-primates. --- Nucleus accumbens. --- Nucleus-accumbens. --- Nucleus. --- Prevention. --- Quantitative em analysis. --- Stereotyped behavior. --- Stereotypic. --- Stereotypies. --- Stereotypy. --- Striatum. --- Visual-cortex. --- Weaning.
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Model. --- Neurobiology. --- Rodent. --- Stereotypies. --- Stereotypy.
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