Neuroscience Program, Michigan State University, 108 Giltner Hall, 293 Farm Lane, East Lansing, MI, 48824, USA.
Department of Physiology, Michigan State University, 2201 BPS, 567 Wilson Rd, East Lansing, MI, 48824, USA.
Biol Sex Differ. 2018 Jul 5;9(1):31. doi: 10.1186/s13293-018-0191-9.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) affects men and women differently. Not only are women twice as likely as men to develop PTSD, they experience different symptoms and comorbidities associated with PTSD. Yet the dearth of preclinical research on females leaves a notable gap in understanding the underlying neuropathology of this sex difference.
Using two standard measures of PTSD-like responses in rats, the acoustic startle response (ASR) and dexamethasone suppression test (DST), we tested the effects of traumatic stress in adult male and female rats using two rodent models of PTSD, single prolonged stress and predator exposure. We then examined the neural correlates underlying these responses with cFos and glucocorticoid receptor immunohistochemistry in brain regions implicated in the traumatic stress response.
We now report that adult male and female rats across two models of PTSD show consistent sex-specific responses that recapitulate fundamental differences of PTSD in men and women. Trauma-exposed males showed the well-established hyper-responsive phenotype of enhanced ASR and exaggerated negative feedback control of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, while the same traumatic event had little effect on these same measures in females. Dramatic sex differences in how trauma affected cFos and glucocorticoid receptor expression in the brain lend further support to the idea that the trauma response of male and female rats is fundamentally different.
Two standard measures, ASR and DST, might suggest that females are resilient to the effects of traumatic stress, but other measures make it clear that females are not resilient, but simply respond differently to trauma. The next important question to answer is why. We conclude that males and females show fundamentally different responses to trauma that do not simply reflect differences in resilience. The divergent effects of trauma in the brains of males and females begin to shed light on the neurobiological underpinnings of these sex differences, paving the way for improved diagnostics and therapeutics that effectively treat both men and women.
创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)在男性和女性中的表现不同。女性患 PTSD 的可能性是男性的两倍,不仅如此,她们还会出现与 PTSD 相关的不同症状和合并症。然而,由于缺乏针对女性的临床前研究,人们对这种性别差异的潜在神经病理学认识仍存在明显空白。
我们使用大鼠 PTSD 样反应的两种标准测量方法,即听觉惊跳反应(ASR)和地塞米松抑制试验(DST),在两种 PTSD 啮齿动物模型(单一延长应激和捕食者暴露)中测试了创伤应激对成年雄性和雌性大鼠的影响。然后,我们通过 cFos 和糖皮质激素受体免疫组织化学检查了与创伤应激反应相关的大脑区域中的神经相关性。
我们现在报告说,两种 PTSD 模型中的成年雄性和雌性大鼠均表现出一致的性别特异性反应,这些反应再现了男性和女性 PTSD 的基本差异。暴露于创伤的雄性大鼠表现出增强的 ASR 和下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺轴的负反馈控制明显过度的典型高反应表型,而相同的创伤事件对雌性大鼠的这些相同指标几乎没有影响。创伤对大脑中 cFos 和糖皮质激素受体表达的影响存在显著的性别差异,进一步支持了这样一种观点,即雄性和雌性大鼠的创伤反应在根本上是不同的。
两种标准测量方法,即听觉惊跳反应和地塞米松抑制试验,可能表明女性对创伤应激的影响具有弹性,但其他测量方法清楚地表明,女性并非具有弹性,而是对创伤的反应不同。下一个需要回答的重要问题是为什么。我们的结论是,男性和女性对创伤的反应表现出根本的不同,这不仅仅反映了弹性的差异。创伤对雄性和雌性大脑的不同影响开始揭示这些性别差异的神经生物学基础,为开发有效治疗男性和女性的诊断和治疗方法铺平了道路。