Ma S, Morilak D A
Department of Pharmacology and Center for Biomedical Neuroscience, MC 7764, University of Texas Health Science Center, 7703 Floyd Curl Drive, San Antonio, TX 78229-3900, USA.
Neuroscience. 2004;124(4):963-72. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2003.12.028.
Activation of the brain noradrenergic system during acute stress is thought to play an important integrative function in coping and stress adaptation by facilitating transmission in many brain regions involved in regulating behavioral and physiologic components of the stress response. Compared with outbred control Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats, inbred Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats exhibit an exaggerated hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) response as well as increased susceptibility to certain forms of stress-related pathology. However, we have also shown previously that WKY rats exhibit reduced anxiety-like behavioral reactivity to acute stress, associated with reduced activation of the brain noradrenergic system. Thus, to understand better the possible neurobiological mechanisms underlying dysregulation of the stress response in WKY rats, we investigated potential strain differences in stress-induced neuronal activation in brain regions that are both involved in regulating behavioral and neuroendocrine stress responses, and are related to the noradrenergic system, either as targets of noradrenergic modulation or as sources of afferent innervation of noradrenergic neurons. This was accomplished by visualizing stress-induced expression of Fos immunoreactivity in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus, lateral bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, central nucleus of the amygdala, and medial nucleus of the amygdala (MeA), as well as the noradrenergic nucleus locus coeruleus (LC). Stress-induced Fos expression was found to be decreased in the LC and MeA of WKY rats compared with similarly stressed SD rats, whereas no strain differences were observed in any of the other brain regions. This suggests that strain-related differences in activation of the MeA may be involved in the abnormal neuroendocrine and behavioral stress responses exhibited by WKY rats. Moreover, as the MeA is both an afferent as well as an efferent target of the brainstem noradrenergic system, reduced MeA activation may either be a source of reduced noradrenergic reactivity seen in WKY rats, or possibly a consequence. Nonetheless, understanding the mechanisms underlying altered stress reactivity in models such as the WKY rat may contribute to a better understanding of stress-related psychopathologies such as depression, post-traumatic stress disorder or other anxiety disorders.
急性应激期间,大脑去甲肾上腺素能系统的激活被认为在应对和应激适应中发挥重要的整合功能,它通过促进许多参与调节应激反应行为和生理成分的脑区中的神经传递来实现这一功能。与远交系对照斯普拉格-道利(SD)大鼠相比,近交系Wistar-Kyoto(WKY)大鼠表现出过度的下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺(HPA)反应,以及对某些形式的应激相关病理学的易感性增加。然而,我们之前也表明,WKY大鼠对急性应激的焦虑样行为反应性降低,这与大脑去甲肾上腺素能系统的激活减少有关。因此,为了更好地理解WKY大鼠应激反应失调背后可能的神经生物学机制,我们研究了在参与调节行为和神经内分泌应激反应且与去甲肾上腺素能系统相关的脑区中,应激诱导的神经元激活的潜在品系差异,这些脑区要么是去甲肾上腺素能调节的靶点,要么是去甲肾上腺素能神经元传入神经支配的来源。这是通过观察下丘脑室旁核、终纹床核外侧核、杏仁核中央核和杏仁核内侧核(MeA)以及去甲肾上腺素能蓝斑核(LC)中应激诱导的Fos免疫反应性表达来实现的。与同样受到应激的SD大鼠相比,发现WKY大鼠的LC和MeA中应激诱导的Fos表达降低,而在其他任何脑区均未观察到品系差异。这表明MeA激活的品系相关差异可能与WKY大鼠表现出的异常神经内分泌和行为应激反应有关。此外,由于MeA既是脑干去甲肾上腺素能系统的传入靶点也是传出靶点,MeA激活减少可能是WKY大鼠去甲肾上腺素能反应性降低的一个原因,也可能是其结果。尽管如此,了解诸如WKY大鼠等模型中应激反应改变的潜在机制,可能有助于更好地理解诸如抑郁症、创伤后应激障碍或其他焦虑症等与应激相关的精神病理学。