Toth Mate, Gresack Jodi E, Bangasser Debra A, Plona Zach, Valentino Rita J, Flandreau Elizabeth I, Mansuy Isabelle M, Merlo-Pich Emilio, Geyer Mark A, Risbrough Victoria B
1] Department of Psychiatry, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA [2] Center of Excellence for Stress and Mental Health, Veterans Affairs Hospital, La Jolla, CA, USA.
1] Department of Psychiatry, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA [2] Laboratory of Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, USA.
Neuropsychopharmacology. 2014 May;39(6):1409-19. doi: 10.1038/npp.2013.336. Epub 2013 Dec 11.
Corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) regulates physiological and behavioral responses to stress. Trauma in early life or adulthood is associated with increased CRF in the cerebrospinal fluid and heightened anxiety. Genetic variance in CRF receptors is linked to altered risk for stress disorders. Thus, both heritable differences and environmentally induced changes in CRF neurotransmission across the lifespan may modulate anxiety traits. To test the hypothesis that CRF hypersignaling is sufficient to modify anxiety-related phenotypes (avoidance, startle, and conditioned fear), we induced transient forebrain-specific overexpression of CRF (CRFOE) in mice (1) during development to model early-life stress, (2) in adulthood to model adult-onset stress, or (3) across the entire postnatal lifespan to model heritable increases in CRF signaling. The consequences of these manipulations on CRF peptide levels and behavioral responses were examined in adulthood. We found that transient CRFOE during development decreased startle habituation and prepulse inhibition, and increased avoidance (particularly in females) recapitulating the behavioral effects of lifetime CRFOE despite lower CRF peptide levels at testing. In contrast, CRFOE limited to adulthood reduced contextual fear learning in females and increased startle reactivity in males but did not change avoidance or startle plasticity. These findings suggest that forebrain CRFOE limited to development is sufficient to induce enduring alterations in startle plasticity and anxiety, while forebrain CRFOE during adulthood results in a different phenotype profile. These findings suggest that startle circuits are particularly sensitive to forebrain CRFOE, and that the impact of CRFOE may be dependent on the time of exposure.
促肾上腺皮质激素释放因子(CRF)调节对压力的生理和行为反应。早年或成年期的创伤与脑脊液中CRF增加及焦虑加剧有关。CRF受体的基因变异与应激障碍风险改变有关。因此,整个生命周期中CRF神经传递的遗传差异和环境诱导变化可能会调节焦虑特质。为了验证CRF高信号足以改变焦虑相关表型(回避、惊吓和条件性恐惧)这一假设,我们在小鼠中诱导了CRF(CRFOE)在前脑的瞬时特异性过表达:(1)在发育期间以模拟早年应激,(2)在成年期以模拟成年期应激,或(3)在整个出生后生命周期中以模拟CRF信号的遗传性增加。在成年期检查了这些操作对CRF肽水平和行为反应的影响。我们发现,发育期间的瞬时CRFOE降低了惊吓习惯化和前脉冲抑制,并增加了回避(尤其是在雌性中),尽管测试时CRF肽水平较低,但仍重现了终身CRFOE的行为效应。相比之下,仅限于成年期的CRFOE降低了雌性的情境恐惧学习,并增加了雄性的惊吓反应性,但没有改变回避或惊吓可塑性。这些发现表明,仅限于发育阶段的前脑CRFOE足以诱导惊吓可塑性和焦虑的持久改变,而成年期的前脑CRFOE则导致不同的表型特征。这些发现表明,惊吓回路对前脑CRFOE特别敏感,并且CRFOE的影响可能取决于暴露时间。