Body weight modulates the impact of oxytocin on chronic cold-immobilization stress response
Özet
By activating the stress system, stress modulates various physiological parameters including food intake, energy
consumption, and, consequently, body weight. The role of oxytocin in the regulation of stress and obesity cannot
be disregarded. Based on these findings, we aimed to investigate the effect of intranasal oxytocin on stress
response in high-fat-diet (HFD)–fed and control-diet-fed rats exposed to chronic stress. Cold-immobilization
stress was applied for 5 consecutive days to male Sprague-Dawley rats fed either with a control diet (n=20)
or HFD (n=20) for 6 weeks. Half of the animals in each group received oxytocin. Stress response was evaluated
via plasma and salivary cortisol levels as well as elevated plus maze scores. Prefrontal cortex and hypothalamic
oxytocin receptor (OxtR) expression levels were identified using western blot analysis. The results showed higher
stress response in HFD-fed animals than in control animals both under basal and post-stress conditions. Oxytocin
application had a prominent anxiolytic effect in the control group but an insignificant effect in the HFD group.
While OxtR expression levels in the prefrontal cortex did not vary according to the body weight and oxytocin
application, OxtR levels in the hypothalamus were higher in the HFD- and/or oxytocin-treated animals. Our
results indicated that the peripheral and central effects of oxytocin vary with body weight. Moreover, obesity
masks the anxiolytic effects of oxytocin, probably by reinforcing the stress condition via central OxtRs. In
conclusion, elucidating the mechanisms underlying the central effect of oxytocin is important to cope with stress
and obesity.