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Dive into the research topics where Ida Beitnes Johansen is active.

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Featured researches published by Ida Beitnes Johansen.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Myonuclei acquired by overload exercise precede hypertrophy and are not lost on detraining

Jo C. Bruusgaard; Ida Beitnes Johansen; Ingrid M. Egner; Zaheer A. Rana; Kristian Gundersen

Effects of previous strength training can be long-lived, even after prolonged subsequent inactivity, and retraining is facilitated by a previous training episode. Traditionally, such “muscle memory” has been attributed to neural factors in the absence of any identified local memory mechanism in the muscle tissue. We have used in vivo imaging techniques to study live myonuclei belonging to distinct muscle fibers and observe that new myonuclei are added before any major increase in size during overload. The old and newly acquired nuclei are retained during severe atrophy caused by subsequent denervation lasting for a considerable period of the animal’s lifespan. The myonuclei seem to be protected from the high apoptotic activity found in inactive muscle tissue. A hypertrophy episode leading to a lasting elevated number of myonuclei retarded disuse atrophy, and the nuclei could serve as a cell biological substrate for such memory. Because the ability to create myonuclei is impaired in the elderly, individuals may benefit from strength training at an early age, and because anabolic steroids facilitate more myonuclei, nuclear permanency may also have implications for exclusion periods after a doping offense.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2013

Neural plasticity and stress coping in teleost fishes.

Christina Sørensen; Ida Beitnes Johansen; Øyvind Øverli

Physiological and behavioural responses to environmental change are individually variable traits, which manifest phenotypically and are subject to natural selection as correlated trait-clusters (coping styles, behavioural syndromes, or personality traits). Comparative research has revealed a range of neuroendocrine-behavioural associations which are conserved throughout the vertebrate subphylum. Regulatory mechanisms universally mediate a switch between proactive (e.g. active/aggressive) and reactive (e.g. conservation/withdrawal) behaviour in response to unpredictable and uncontrollable events. Thresholds for switching from active coping to behavioural inhibition are individually variable, and depend on experience and genetic factors. Such factors affect physiological stress responses as well as perception, learning, and memory. Here we review the role of an important contributor to neural processing, the set of biochemical, molecular, and structural processes collectively referred to as neural plasticity. We will concentrate on work in teleost fishes, while also elucidating conserved aspects. In fishes, environmental and physiological control of brain cell proliferation and neurogenesis has received recent attention. This work has revealed that the expression of genes involved in CNS plasticity is affected by heritable variation in stress coping style, and is also differentially affected by short- and long-term stress. Chronic stress experienced by subordinate fish in social hierarchies leads to a marked suppression of brain cell proliferation. Interestingly, typically routine dependent and inflexible behaviour in proactive individuals is also associated with low transcription of neurogenesis related genes. The potential for these findings to illuminate stress-related neurobiological disorders in other vertebrates is also discussed.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part D: Genomics and Proteomics | 2011

Cortisol receptor expression differs in the brains of rainbow trout selected for divergent cortisol responses.

Ida Beitnes Johansen; Guro K. Sandvik; Göran E. Nilsson; Morten Bakken; Øyvind Øverli

In rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss), selection for divergent post-stress plasma cortisol levels has yielded low (LR)- and high (HR) responsive lines, differing in behavioural and physiological aspects of stress coping. For instance, LR fish display prolonged retention of a fear response and of previously learnt routines, compared to HR fish. This study aims at investigating putative central nervous system mechanisms controlling behaviour and memory retention. The stress hormone cortisol is known to affect several aspects of cognition, including memory retention. Cortisol acts through glucocorticoid receptors 1 and 2 (GR1 and 2) and a mineralcorticoid receptor (MR), all of which are abundantly expressed in the salmonid brain. We hypothesized that different expressions of MR and GRs in LR and HR trout brains could be involved in the observed differences in cognition. We quantified the mRNA expression of GR1, GR2 and MR in different brain regions of stressed and non-stressed LR and HR trout. The expression of MR was higher in LR than in HR fish in all brain parts investigated. This could be associated with reduced anxiety and enhanced memory retention in LR fish. MR and GR1 expression was also subject to negative regulation by stress in a site-specific manner.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Pigments, Parasites and Personalitiy: Towards a Unifying Role for Steroid Hormones?

Silje Kittilsen; Ida Beitnes Johansen; Bjarne O. Braastad; Øyvind Øverli

A surging interest in the evolution of consistent trait correlations has inspired research on pigment patterns as a correlate of behavioural syndromes, or “animal personalities”. Associations between pigmentation, physiology and health status are less investigated as potentially conserved trait clusters. In the current study, lice counts performed on farmed Atlantic salmon Salmo salar naturally infected with ectoparasitic sea lice Lepeophtheirus salmonis showed that individual fish with high incidence of black melanin-based skin spots harboured fewer female sea lice carrying egg sacs, compared to less pigmented fish. There was no significant association between pigmentation and lice at other developmental stages, suggesting that host factors associated with melanin-based pigmentation may modify ectoparasite development to a larger degree than settlement. In a subsequent laboratory experiment a strong negative correlation between skin spots and post-stress cortisol levels was revealed, with less pigmented individuals showing a more pronounced cortisol response to acute stress. The observation that lice prevalence was strongly increased on a fraction of sexually mature male salmon which occurred among the farmed fish further supports a role for steroid hormones as mediators of reduced parasite resistance. The data presented here propose steroid hormones as a proximate cause for the association between melanin-based pigmentation and parasites. Possible fundamental and applied implications are discussed.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part D: Genomics and Proteomics | 2012

Neural plasticity is affected by stress and heritable variation in stress coping style

Ida Beitnes Johansen; Christina Sørensen; Guro K. Sandvik; Göran E. Nilsson; Erik Höglund; Morten Bakken; Øyvind Øverli

Here we use a comparative model to investigate how behavioral and physiological traits correlate with neural plasticity. Selection for divergent post-stress cortisol levels in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) has yielded low- (LR) and high responsive (HR) lines. Recent reports show low behavioral flexibility in LR compared to HR fish and we hypothesize that this divergence is caused by differences in neural plasticity. Genes involved in neural plasticity and neurogenesis were investigated by quantitative PCR in brains of LR and HR fish at baseline conditions and in response to two different stress paradigms: short-term confinement (STC) and long-term social (LTS) stress. Expression of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), neurogenic differentiation factor (NeuroD) and doublecortin (DCX) was generally higher in HR compared to LR fish. STC stress led to increased expression of PCNA and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in both lines, whereas LTS stress generally suppressed PCNA and NeuroD expression while leaving BDNF expression unaltered. These results indicate that the transcription of neuroplasticity-related genes is associated with variation in coping style, while also being affected by STC - and LTS stress in a biphasic manner. A higher degree of neural plasticity in HR fish may provide the substrate for enhanced behavioral flexibility.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2011

Cortisol response to stress is associated with myocardial remodeling in salmonid fishes

Ida Beitnes Johansen; Ida G. Lunde; Helge Røsjø; Geir Christensen; Göran E. Nilsson; Morten Bakken; Øyvind Øverli

SUMMARY Cardiac disease is frequently reported in farmed animals, and stress has been implicated as a factor for myocardial dysfunction in commercial fish rearing. Cortisol is a major stress hormone in teleosts, and this hormone has adverse effects on the myocardium. Strains of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) selected for divergent post-stress cortisol levels [high responsive (HR) and low responsive (LR)] have been established as a comparative model to examine how fish with contrasting stress-coping styles differ in their physiological and behavioral profiles. We show that the mean cardiosomatic index (CSI) of adult HR fish was 34% higher than in LR fish, mainly because of hypertrophy of the compact myocardium. To characterize the hypertrophy as physiological or pathological, we investigated specific cardiac markers at the transcriptional level. HR hearts had higher mRNA levels of cortisol receptors (MR, GR1 and GR2), increased RCAN1 levels [suggesting enhanced pro-hypertrophic nuclear factor of activated T-cell (NFAT) signaling] and increased VEGF gene expression (reflecting increased angiogenesis). Elevated collagen (Col1a2) expression and deposition in HR hearts supported enhanced fibrosis, whereas the heart failure markers ANP and BNP were not upregulated in HR hearts. To confirm our results outside the selection model, we investigated the effect of acute confinement stress in wild-type European brown trout, Salmo trutta. A positive correlation between post-stress cortisol levels and CSI was observed, supporting an association between enhanced cortisol response and myocardial remodeling. In conclusion, post-stress cortisol production correlates with myocardial remodeling, and coincides with several indicators of heart pathology, well-known from mammalian cardiology.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2014

Frustrative reward omission increases aggressive behaviour of inferior fighters.

Marco A. Vindas; Ida Beitnes Johansen; Sergio Vela-Avitúa; Karoline Sletbak Nørstrud; Marion Aalgaard; Bjarne O. Braastad; Erik Höglund; Øyvind Øverli

Animals use aggressive behaviour to gain access to resources, and individuals adjust their behaviour relative to resource value and own resource holding potential (RHP). Normally, smaller individuals have inferior fighting abilities compared with larger conspecifics. Affective and cognitive processes can alter contest dynamics, but the interaction between such effects and that of differing RHPs has not been adjudged. We investigated effects of omission of expected reward (OER) on competing individuals with contrasting RHPs. Small and large rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) were conditioned to associate a light with reward. Thereafter, the reward was omitted for half of the fish prior to a contest between individuals possessing a 36–40% difference in RHP. Small control individuals displayed submissive behaviour and virtually no aggression. By contrast, small OER individuals were more aggressive, and two out of 11 became socially dominant. Increased aggression in small OER individuals was accompanied by increased serotonin levels in the dorsomedial pallium (proposed amygdala homologue), but no changes in limbic dopamine neurochemistry were observed in OER-exposed individuals. The behavioural and physiological response to OER in fish indicates that frustration is an evolutionarily conserved affective state. Moreover, our results indicate that aggressive motivation to reward unpredictability affects low RHP individuals strongest.


Physiology & Behavior | 2014

Ectoparasitic sea lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis) affect behavior and brain serotonergic activity in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.): Perspectives on animal welfare

Øyvind Øverli; Janicke Nordgreen; Cecilie Marie Mejdell; Andrew M. Janczak; Silje Kittilsen; Ida Beitnes Johansen; Tor Einar Horsberg

Scientific research and public debate on the welfare of animals in human custody is increasing at present. Fish are in this context mentioned with particular attention to the high numbers of individuals reared in aquaculture. Research on fish has also contributed to the understanding of individual variation in the ability to cope with stress and disease. One mediator of such variation is the brain serotonergic (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) system, which conveys physiological and behavioral responses to stress and sub-optimal rearing conditions. Here we study links between the 5-HT response, melanin-based skin pigmentation, and behavior in laboratory-reared Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) experimentally infested with ectoparasitic sea lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis). Lice numbers were more variable in less pigmented fish, while the neurochemical response to ectoparastic lice-increased levels of the main 5-HT catabolite 5-HIAA in the brain stem-did not differ between pigmentation groups. A strong depression of growth and locomotor activity was seen in all infested fish but less pigmented fish grew better than fish with more skin melanization regardless of infestation status. The observed combination of neurochemical and behavioral effects clearly suggest that animal welfare concerns can be added to the list of negative effects of ectoparasitic sea lice.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Coping with Unpredictability: Dopaminergic and Neurotrophic Responses to Omission of Expected Reward in Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar L.)

Marco A. Vindas; Christina Sørensen; Ida Beitnes Johansen; Ole Folkedal; Erik Höglund; Uniza Wahid Khan; Lars Helge Stien; Tore S. Kristiansen; Bjarne O. Braastad; Øyvind Øverli

Comparative studies are imperative for understanding the evolution of adaptive neurobiological processes such as neural plasticity, cognition, and emotion. Previously we have reported that prolonged omission of expected rewards (OER, or ‘frustrative nonreward’) causes increased aggression in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar). Here we report changes in brain monoaminergic activity and relative abundance of brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and dopamine receptor mRNA transcripts in the same paradigm. Groups of fish were initially conditioned to associate a flashing light with feeding. Subsequently, the expected food reward was delayed for 30 minutes during two out of three meals per day in the OER treatment, while the previously established routine was maintained in control groups. After 8 days there was no effect of OER on baseline brain stem serotonin (5-HT) or dopamine (DA) activity. Subsequent exposure to acute confinement stress led to increased plasma cortisol and elevated turnover of brain stem DA and 5-HT in all animals. The DA response was potentiated and DA receptor 1 (D1) mRNA abundance was reduced in the OER-exposed fish, indicating a sensitization of the DA system. In addition OER suppressed abundance of BDNF in the telencephalon of non-stressed fish. Regardless of OER treatment, a strong positive correlation between BDNF and D1 mRNA abundance was seen in non-stressed fish. This correlation was disrupted by acute stress, and replaced by a negative correlation between BDNF abundance and plasma cortisol concentration. These observations indicate a conserved link between DA, neurotrophin regulation, and corticosteroid-signaling pathways. The results also emphasize how fish models can be important tools in the study of neural plasticity and responsiveness to environmental unpredictability.


Royal Society Open Science | 2016

Brain serotonergic activation in growth-stunted farmed salmon: adaption versus pathology

Marco A. Vindas; Ida Beitnes Johansen; Ole Folkedal; Erik Höglund; Marnix Gorissen; Gert Flik; Tore S. Kristiansen; Øyvind Øverli

Signalling systems activated under stress are highly conserved, suggesting adaptive effects of their function. Pathologies arising from continued activation of such systems may represent a mismatch between evolutionary programming and current environments. Here, we use Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) in aquaculture as a model to explore this stance of evolutionary-based medicine, for which empirical evidence has been lacking. Growth-stunted (GS) farmed fish were characterized by elevated brain serotonergic activation, increased cortisol production and behavioural inhibition. We make the novel observation that the serotonergic system in GS fish is unresponsive to additional stressors, yet a cortisol response is maintained. The inability of the serotonergic system to respond to additional stress, while a cortisol response is present, probably leads to both imbalance in energy metabolism and attenuated neural plasticity. Hence, we propose that serotonin-mediated behavioural inhibition may have evolved in vertebrates to minimize stress exposure in vulnerable individuals.

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Øyvind Øverli

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

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Erik Höglund

Technical University of Denmark

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Bjarne O. Braastad

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

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Morten Bakken

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

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Silje Kittilsen

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

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Ole Folkedal

Animal Welfare Institute

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