Levine J B, Leeder A D, Parekkadan B, Berdichevsky Y, Rauch S L, Smoller J W, Konradi C, Berthiaume F, Yarmush M L
Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA 02114, USA.
Neuroscience. 2008 Jan 24;151(2):589-603. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2007.10.014. Epub 2007 Oct 24.
In addition to its maladaptive effects on psychiatric function, psychosocial deprivation impairs recovery from physical illness. Previously, we found that psychosocial deprivation, modeled by isolation rearing, depressed immediate early gene (IEG) expression in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and increased locomotion in the open field test [Levine JB, Youngs RM, et al. (2007) Isolation rearing and hyperlocomotion are associated with reduced immediate early gene expression levels in the medial prefrontal cortex. Neuroscience 145(1):42-55]. In the present study, we examined whether similar changes in behavior and gene expression are associated with the maladaptive effects of psychosocial deprivation on physical injury healing. After weaning, anesthetized rats were subjected to a 20% total body surface area third degree burn injury and were subsequently either group or isolation reared. After 4 weeks of either isolation or group rearing (a period that encompasses post-wearing and early adolescence), rats were killed, and their healing and gene expression in the mPFC were assessed. Locomotion in the open field test was examined at 3 weeks post-burn injury. We found that: 1) gross wound healing was significantly impaired in isolation-reared rats compared with group-reared rats, 2) locomotion was increased and IEG expression was suppressed for isolation-reared rats during burn injury healing, 3) the decreased activity in the open field and increased IEG expression was greater for burn injury healing group-reared rats than for uninjured group-reared rats, 4) the degree of hyperactivity and IEG suppression was relatively similar between isolation-reared rats during burn injury compared with uninjured isolation-reared rats. Thus, in the mPFC, behavioral hyperactivity to novelty (the open field test) along with IEG suppression may constitute a detectable biomarker of isolation rearing during traumatic physical injury. Implications of the findings for understanding, assessing, and treating the maladaptive effects of psychosocial deprivation on physical healing during childhood are discussed.
除了对精神功能产生适应不良影响外,社会心理剥夺还会损害身体疾病的康复。此前,我们发现,以隔离饲养为模型的社会心理剥夺会降低内侧前额叶皮质(mPFC)中即刻早期基因(IEG)的表达,并增加旷场试验中的运动能力[Levine JB, Youngs RM等人(2007年)。隔离饲养和运动亢进与内侧前额叶皮质中即刻早期基因表达水平降低有关。神经科学145(1):42 - 55]。在本研究中,我们研究了行为和基因表达的类似变化是否与社会心理剥夺对身体损伤愈合的适应不良影响有关。断奶后,对麻醉的大鼠造成20%体表面积的三度烧伤,随后将它们分组饲养或隔离饲养。在隔离或分组饲养4周后(这段时间涵盖断奶后和青春期早期),处死大鼠,并评估它们的愈合情况以及mPFC中的基因表达。在烧伤后3周检查旷场试验中的运动能力。我们发现:1)与分组饲养的大鼠相比,隔离饲养的大鼠总体伤口愈合明显受损;2)在烧伤愈合过程中,隔离饲养的大鼠运动增加且IEG表达受到抑制;3)与未受伤的分组饲养大鼠相比,烧伤愈合的分组饲养大鼠在旷场中的活动减少且IEG表达增加更为明显;4)与未受伤的隔离饲养大鼠相比,烧伤期间隔离饲养的大鼠多动程度和IEG抑制程度相对相似。因此,在mPFC中,对新奇事物的行为多动(旷场试验)以及IEG抑制可能构成创伤性身体损伤期间隔离饲养的可检测生物标志物。讨论了这些发现对理解、评估和治疗儿童期社会心理剥夺对身体愈合的适应不良影响的意义。