Department of Cellular and Physiological Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2010 Apr;34(4):633-45. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2009.01132.x. Epub 2010 Jan 26.
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) is associated with numerous neurobehavioral alterations, as well as disabilities in a number of domains, including a high incidence of depression and anxiety disorders. Prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) also alters hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) function, resulting in increased responsiveness to stressors and HPA dysregulation in adulthood. Interestingly, data suggest that pre-existing HPA abnormalities may be a major contributory factor to some forms of depression, particularly when an individual is exposed to stressors later in life. We tested the hypothesis that exposure to stressors in adulthood may unmask an increased vulnerability to depressive- and anxiety-like behaviors in PAE animals.
Male and female offspring from prenatal alcohol (PAE), pair-fed (PF), and ad libitum-fed control (C) treatment groups were tested in adulthood. Animals were exposed to 10 consecutive days of chronic mild stress (CMS), and assessed in a battery of well-validated tasks sensitive to differences in depressive- and/or anxiety-like behaviors.
We report here that the combination of PAE and CMS in adulthood increases depressive- and anxiety-like behaviors in a sexually dimorphic manner. PAE males showed impaired hedonic responsivity (sucrose contrast test), locomotor hyperactivity (open field), and alterations in affiliative and nonaffiliative social behaviors (social interaction test) compared to control males. By contrast, PAE and, to a lesser extent, PF, females showed greater levels of "behavioral despair" in the forced swim test, and PAE females showed altered behavior in the final 5 minutes of the social interaction test compared to control females.
These data support the possibility that stress may be a mediating or contributing factor in the psychopathologies reported in FASD populations.
胎儿酒精谱系障碍(FASD)与许多神经行为改变有关,以及许多领域的残疾,包括抑郁症和焦虑症的高发率。产前酒精暴露(PAE)也改变了下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺(HPA)功能,导致成年后对压力源的反应性增加和 HPA 失调。有趣的是,数据表明,预先存在的 HPA 异常可能是某些形式的抑郁症的主要促成因素,特别是当个体在以后的生活中暴露于压力源时。我们检验了这样一个假设,即成年期暴露于压力源可能会使 PAE 动物更容易出现抑郁和焦虑样行为。
来自产前酒精(PAE)、配对喂养(PF)和自由喂养对照组(C)的雄性和雌性后代在成年期接受测试。动物接受连续 10 天的慢性轻度应激(CMS),并在一系列经过充分验证的任务中进行评估,这些任务对抑郁和/或焦虑样行为的差异敏感。
我们在这里报告,成年期 PAE 和 CMS 的结合以性别二态的方式增加了抑郁和焦虑样行为。PAE 雄性与对照组雄性相比,表现出快感反应受损(蔗糖对比测试)、运动过度活跃(旷场测试)以及亲和和非亲和社会行为改变(社会互动测试)。相比之下,PAE 和在较小程度上的 PF 雌性在强迫游泳测试中表现出更高水平的“行为绝望”,而 PAE 雌性在社会互动测试的最后 5 分钟表现出改变的行为与对照组雌性相比。
这些数据支持了这样一种可能性,即压力可能是 FASD 人群中报告的精神病理学的中介或促成因素。