Tryptophan and tonic immobility in chickens: Effects of dietary and systemic manipulations. |
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Authors: | Gallup, Gordon G., Jr. Wallnau, Larry B. Boren, James L. Gagliardi, Gregg J. Maser, Jack D. Edson, Patricia H. |
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Abstract: | Consistent with a serotonergic-midbrain raphe model of tonic immobility, 4 experiments designed to evoke changes in serum tryptophan produced reliable effects on the duration of the response in a total of 114 Production Red chickens. Systemic injections of tryptophan, the dietary precursor of serotonin, led to a dose-dependent increase in immobility, with optimal effects observed within 30 min after injection. Dietary depletion of endogenous tryptophan attenuated the duration of immobility, and a diet completely free of tryptophan, but supplemented with niacin, practically abolished the reaction. Dietary replacement of tryptophan reinstated the response. In a 5th experiment with 20 Ss, tryptamine, an alternative metabolic by-product of tryptophan, had no effect on immobility. Data are discussed in light of evidence showing serotonergic involvement in tonic immobility. (22 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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