Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, University of California San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92093-0603, USA.
Neuroscience. 2010 Nov 10;170(4):1189-98. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2010.08.002. Epub 2010 Aug 5.
Early life adversity or parental neglect is linked to the development of a number of psychiatric illnesses, including major depression and substance use disorder. These two disorders are often comorbid and characterized by anhedonia, defined as the reduced ability to experience pleasure or reward. The aim of the present study was to determine the effects of neonatal maternal separation in Long Evans rats, a model of early life stress, on anhedonia under baseline conditions and in response to drug and stress exposure during adulthood. Three hours of daily maternal separation from postnatal day 1 to 14 led to marked decreases in arched-back nursing, licking, and grooming of pups by their dams. In adulthood, brain reward function was assessed using intracranial self-stimulation of the lateral hypothalamus. Lowered current thresholds derived from this procedure are interpreted as reward-enhancing effects, whereas elevations in thresholds are an operational measure of anhedonia. Maternally separated rats did not exhibit anhedonia under baseline conditions compared with non-handled controls but exhibited a greater reward-enhancing effect of acute amphetamine administration. Acute social defeat produced anhedonia in non-handled controls, but not in maternally separated rats. Conversely, control rats habituated to 7 days of repeated social defeat, whereas maternally separated rats developed an increased anhedonic response to the repeated stressor. One week after termination of stress exposure, maternally separated rats still exhibited an increased reward-enhancing effect of acute amphetamine administration compared with non-handled controls, regardless of prior social defeat experience. These data indicate that early life stress increases the reward-enhancing properties of amphetamine, protects against the anhedonic effects of acute stress exposure, and exacerbates the anhedonic response to repeated stress. Thus, early life stress may increase an individual's vulnerability to depressive or addictive disorders when confronted with stress or drug challenge in adulthood.
早期生活逆境或父母忽视与许多精神疾病的发展有关,包括重度抑郁症和物质使用障碍。这两种疾病通常并存,并以快感缺失为特征,定义为体验愉悦或奖励的能力降低。本研究旨在确定新生期母体分离(一种早期应激模型)对成年期暴露于药物和应激时快感缺失的基础状态和反应的影响。从产后第 1 天到第 14 天,每天对幼鼠进行 3 小时的母体分离,导致幼鼠被母亲拱背哺乳、舔舐和梳理的次数明显减少。在成年期,使用侧下丘脑的颅内自我刺激来评估大脑奖励功能。从该程序得出的较低电流阈值被解释为增强奖励的效果,而阈值升高是快感缺失的操作测量。与非处理对照组相比,母体分离大鼠在基础状态下没有表现出快感缺失,但表现出更强的急性安非他命给药的奖励增强效应。急性社会挫败在非处理对照组中产生快感缺失,但在母体分离大鼠中没有。相反,对照组大鼠适应了 7 天的重复社会挫败,而母体分离大鼠对重复应激源表现出增加的快感缺失反应。应激暴露终止后 1 周,母体分离大鼠仍表现出比非处理对照组更强的急性安非他命给药的奖励增强效应,无论之前是否经历过急性社会挫败。这些数据表明,早期生活应激增加了安非他命的奖励增强特性,保护了急性应激暴露的快感缺失效应,并加重了对重复应激的快感缺失反应。因此,早期生活应激可能会增加个体在成年期面临应激或药物挑战时患抑郁或成瘾障碍的易感性。