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Predators inhibit brain cell proliferation in natural populations of electric fish,Brachyhypopomus occidentalis
Authors:Kent D Dunlap  Alex Tran  Michael A Ragazzi  Rüdiger Krahe  Vielka L Salazar
Institution:1.Department of Biology, Trinity College, Hartford, CT 06106, USA;2.Department of Biology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3A 1B1;3.Department of Biology, Cape Breton University, Sydney, Nova Scotia, Canada, B1P 6L2
Abstract:Compared with laboratory environments, complex natural environments promote brain cell proliferation and neurogenesis. Predators are one important feature of many natural environments, but, in the laboratory, predatory stimuli tend to inhibit brain cell proliferation. Often, laboratory predatory stimuli also elevate plasma glucocorticoids, which can then reduce brain cell proliferation. However, it is unknown how natural predators affect cell proliferation or whether glucocorticoids mediate the neurogenic response to natural predators. We examined brain cell proliferation in six populations of the electric fish, Brachyhypopomus occidentalis, exposed to three forms of predator stimuli: (i) natural variation in the density of predatory catfish; (ii) tail injury, presumably from predation attempts; and (iii) the acute stress of capture. Populations with higher predation pressure had lower density of proliferating (PCNA+) cells, and fish with injured tails had lower proliferating cell density than those with intact tails. However, plasma cortisol did not vary at the population level according to predation pressure or at the individual level according to tail injury. Capture stress significantly increased cortisol, but only marginally decreased cell proliferation. Thus, it appears that the presence of natural predators inhibits brain cell proliferation, but not via mechanisms that depend on changes in basal cortisol levels. This study is the first demonstration of predator-induced alteration of brain cell proliferation in a free-living vertebrate.
Keywords:predators  brain cell proliferation  neurogenesis  cortisol  fish
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