UC San Francisco, Neuroscience Graduate Program, 1550 4th St., San Francisco, CA 94158, USA.
UC Berkeley, Department of Psychology, 16 Barker Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2017 Nov;85:78-87. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2017.08.009. Epub 2017 Aug 12.
Anxiety and depression symptoms increase dramatically during adolescence, with girls showing a steeper increase than boys after puberty onset. The timing of the onset of this sex bias led us to hypothesize that ovarian hormones contribute to depression and anxiety during puberty. In humans, it is difficult to disentangle direct effects of gonadal hormones from social and environmental factors that interact with pubertal development to influence mental health. To test the role of gonadal hormones in anxiety- and depression-related behavior during puberty, we manipulated gonadal hormones in mice while controlling social and environmental factors. Similar to humans, we find that mice show an increase in depression-related behavior from pre-pubertal to late-pubertal ages, but this increase is not dependent on gonadal hormones and does not differ between sexes. Anxiety-related behavior, however, is more complex during puberty, with differences that depend on sex, age, behavioral test, and hormonal status. Briefly, males castrated before puberty show greater anxiety-related behavior during late puberty compared to intact males, while pubertal females are unaffected by ovariectomy or hormone injections in all assays except the marble burying test. Despite this sex-specific effect of pubertal hormones on anxiety-related behavior, we find no sex differences in intact young adults, suggesting that males and females use separate mechanisms to converge on a similar behavioral phenotype. Our results are consistent with anxiolytic effects of testicular hormones during puberty in males but are not consistent with a causal role for ovarian hormones in increasing anxiety- and depression-related behavior during puberty in females.
焦虑和抑郁症状在青春期急剧增加,青春期后女孩的增长幅度比男孩更大。这种性别偏见的出现时间使我们假设卵巢激素在青春期对抑郁和焦虑有影响。在人类中,很难将性腺激素的直接作用与与青春期发育相互作用影响心理健康的社会和环境因素区分开来。为了测试性腺激素在青春期焦虑和抑郁相关行为中的作用,我们在控制社会和环境因素的同时,操纵了小鼠的性腺激素。与人类相似,我们发现小鼠从青春期前到青春期后期的抑郁相关行为增加,但这种增加不依赖于性腺激素,并且在性别之间没有差异。然而,焦虑相关行为在青春期更为复杂,其差异取决于性别、年龄、行为测试和激素状态。简而言之,青春期前被去势的雄性小鼠在青春期后期表现出更大的焦虑相关行为,而青春期雌性小鼠在所有测试中(除了大理石埋藏测试)都不受卵巢切除术或激素注射的影响。尽管青春期激素对焦虑相关行为有这种性别特异性的影响,但我们在完整的年轻成年人中没有发现性别差异,这表明雄性和雌性使用不同的机制来达到相似的行为表型。我们的结果与青春期睾丸激素的抗焦虑作用一致,但与卵巢激素在女性青春期增加焦虑和抑郁相关行为中起因果作用不一致。