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Showing papers by "Javier Carrasco published in 2015"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Validation of the long‐term assessment of hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal activity in rats using hair corticosterone as a biomarker is validated and HC measurement in rats appears appropriate to evaluate integrated chronic changes in circulating cortic testosterone.
Abstract: The evaluation of chronic activity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis is critical for determining the impact of chronic stressful situations. However, current methods have important limitations. The potential use of hair glucocorticoids as a noninvasive retrospective biomarker of long-term HPA activity is gaining acceptance in humans and wild animals. However, there is no study examining hair corticosterone (HC) in laboratory animals. The present study validates a method for measuring HC in rats and demonstrates that it properly reflects chronic HPA activity. The HC concentration was similar in male and female rats, despite higher total plasma corticosterone levels in females, tentatively suggesting that it reflects free rather than total plasma corticosterone. Exposure of male rats to 2 different chronic stress protocols (chronic immobilization and chronic unpredictable stress) resulted in similarly higher HC levels compared to controls (1.8-fold). HC also increased after a mild chronic stressor (30 min daily restraint). Chronic administration of 2 different doses of a long-acting ACTH preparation dramatically increased HC (3.1- and 21.5-fold, respectively), demonstrating that a ceiling effect in HC accumulation is unlikely under other more natural conditions. Finally, adrenalectomy significantly reduced HC. In conclusion, HC measurement in rats appears appropriate to evaluate integrated chronic changes in circulating corticosterone.

46 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present results indicate that CB1R is not critical for overall effects of daily repeated stress or proper adaptation of the HPA axis in mice and rats.

14 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jul 2015-Cytokine
TL;DR: Gender-differences of HFD treatment on fast and slow skeletal muscle in muscle-specific IL-6 deficient mice are reported and sex-dependent effects of both HFD and muscle IL- 6 deficiency in skeletal muscle are demonstrated.

5 citations