Standardized chronic restraint stress protocols reveal dynamic evolution of behavioral adaptations in male mice: implications for translational neuroscience.
Molecular psychiatry April 1, 2026 Zijian Lv, Qifeng Xie, Kecan Li et al. 3 citations
Chronic stress changes behavior in both people and animals. By testing different chronic restraint stress (CRS) protocols in male mice, researchers identified that short, intense stress (6 hours/day for 3 days) caused persistent avoidance and repetitive behaviors, while longer, milder stress (2 hours/day for 10–14 days) progressively reduced reward-seeking and coping behaviors. A 10-day CRS protocol marked a threshold for reward-seeking deficits and served as a model combining avoidance and reward-processing impairments. The antidepressant ketamine reversed reward-seeking and coping deficits, while paroxetine alleviated both repetitive/avoidance behaviors and coping/reward-seeking deficits. These findings support CRS as a valid male mouse model of stress-related neuropsychiatric disorders.