[Neonatal Semax and saline injections induce open-field behavior changes in mice of different genotypes].
Shilova. O B OB; Markina. N V NV; Perepelkina. O V OV; Gichenok. I V IV; Korochkin. L I LI; Poletaeva. I I II
Key Findings
- Neonatal injections (both semax and saline) produced lasting changes in adult open‑field behavior in mice.
- The behavioral changes (freezing, grooming, rearing, hole‑poking) were strongly dependent on the mouse genotype.
- In DBA/2 mice, semax reduced some of the saline‑induced increases in center crossing and rearing, suggesting a partial compensatory effect.
Practical Outcomes
- The findings are not directly applicable to human biohacking or longevity protocols. They highlight that early‑life interventions can have long‑term, strain‑specific effects on behavior, but there is no clear guidance for dosing or use of semax in adults.
Summary
A study gave newborn mice tiny doses of the peptide semax or just salty water and later checked how they behaved in an open arena as adults. Both treatments changed things like freezing, grooming, and exploring, but the effects varied a lot depending on the mouse strain. In some strains, semax seemed to offset some of the changes caused by the saline injections, but overall the results were mixed and hard to interpret.
Abstract
DBA/2, CBA mice, and their F1 hybrids (first series) and 101/HY and C3H mice (second series) were injected as neonates (2-7 days of life) with Semax (sc., 7 microg per animal). Semax is a peptide analogue of ACHT4-10 fragment which is resistant to degradation. The common feature of remote effects of both Semax and saline injections was the set of changes in the open-field behavior in adult (2.5- to 3-month-old) animals as compared to intact mice. Unexpectedly, the neonatal saline injections induced many changes in adult behavior, part of these effects being genotype-dependent. The most conspicuous shifts (genotype-dependent increase or decline) in freezing, grooming and rearing scores were displayed by DBA/2 and C3H mice, whereas the hole-poke frequencies were significantly changed in CBA and C3H mice. Squares crossed in the center of arena and rearing number were significantly increased in saline group of DBA/2 mice, whereas in Semax-injected DBA/2 group they were approximately equal to the level of intact mice. This means that the remote effects of noxious stimulation (injections of saline) were in some ways "compensated" as the result of concomitant peptide effect. At the same time, the numbers of freezing and grooming episodes were also increased in these groups. Because exploratory behavior and manifestations of anxiety increased or decreased simultaneously, it proves to be difficult to ascribe these changes to behavioral modulation along the "novelty seeking--anxiety" axis. In mice of other genotypes, changes in the same indices of the open-field behavior were revealed, but these changes were different in their direction. It was suggested that the complex patterns of postnatal behavior was the result of neonatal injections modulating subsequent brain development.
Study Information
pubmed
2004