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Rodent Models of Depression: Neurotrophic and Neuroinflammatory Biomarkers

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TLDR
The present review focuses on the numerous experimental rodent models of depression induced by different stress factors during early life (including prenatal period) or adulthood, giving emphasis to the data on the changes of neurotrophic factors and neuroinflammatory indices in the brain.
Abstract
Rodent models are an indispensable tool for studying etiology and progress of depression. Since interrelated systems of neurotrophic factors and cytokines comprise major regulatory mechanisms controlling normal brain plasticity, impairments of these systems form the basis for development of cerebral pathologies, including mental diseases. The present review focuses on the numerous experimental rodent models of depression induced by different stress factors (exteroceptive and interoceptive) during early life (including prenatal period) or adulthood, giving emphasis to the data on the changes of neurotrophic factors and neuroinflammatory indices in the brain. These parameters are closely related to behavioral depression-like symptoms and impairments of neuronal plasticity and are both gender- and genotype-dependent. Stress-related changes in expression of neurotrophins and cytokines in rodent brain are region-specific. Some contradictory data reported by different groups may be a consequence of differences of stress paradigms or their realization in different laboratories. Like all experimental models, stress-induced depression-like conditions are experimental simplification of clinical depression states; however, they are suitable for understanding the involvement of neurotrophic factors and cytokines in the pathogenesis of the disease—a goal unachievable in the clinical reality. These major regulatory systems may be important targets for therapeutic measures as well as for development of drugs for treatment of depression states.

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Brain-derived neurotrophic factor: a bridge between inflammation and neuroplasticity

TL;DR: One of the most interesting hypotheses: the involvement of the neurotrophin brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), which represents one of the major mediators of neuroplasticity, is discussed.
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Neurobiology and consequences of social isolation stress in animal model-A comprehensive review.

TL;DR: In several regions of the central nervous system (CNS), SIS alters the level of neurotransmitter such as dopamine, serotonin, gamma aminobutyric acid, glutamate, nitrergic system and adrenaline as well as leads to alteration in receptor sensitivity of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and opioid system.
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Making Sense of Rodent Models of Anhedonia.

TL;DR: Rodent models of anhedonia are valuable tools in the study of the neurobiological mechanisms underpinning impaired behavioral responses and in the screening and characterization of drugs that may reverse these behavioral deficits.
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The effects of ginsenoside Rg1 on chronic stress induced depression-like behaviors, BDNF expression and the phosphorylation of PKA and CREB in rats.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that ginsenoside Rg1 exhibits antidepressant-like effects against CUMS-induced depression, and appears to be mediated, at least in part, by a CREB-regulated increase of BDNF expression in the amygdala of rats.
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Functional Neurochemistry of the Ventral and Dorsal Hippocampus: Stress, Depression, Dementia and Remote Hippocampal Damage

TL;DR: A new hypothesis is suggested on the principal involvement of stress response mechanisms in the remote hippocampal damage underlying delayed dementia and depression induced by focal brain damage (e.g. post-stroke and post-traumatic) and the translational validity of this hypothesis comprising new approaches in preventing post- stroke andPost-trauma depression and dementia can be confirmed in experimental and clinical studies.
References
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Journal Article

Behavioral despair in mice: a primary screening test for antidepressants

TL;DR: The mouse procedure is more rapid and less costly than that with rats and is thus more suitable for the primary screening of antidepressant drugs, suggesting that the procedure is selectively sensitive to antidepressant treatments.
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Behavioural despair in rats: a new model sensitive to antidepressant treatments.

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The role of childhood trauma in the neurobiology of mood and anxiety disorders: preclinical and clinical studies

TL;DR: Preclinical studies suggest that early life stress induces long-lived hyper(re)activity of corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) systems as well as alterations in other neurotransmitter systems, resulting in increased stress responsiveness.
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Causal Relationship Between Stressful Life Events and the Onset of Major Depression

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Vascular niche for adult hippocampal neurogenesis.

TL;DR: The present data provide the first evidence that adult neurogenesis occurs within an angiogenic niche and may provide a novel interface where mesenchyme‐derived cells and circulating factors influence plasticity in the adult central nervous system.
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