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 13;9(1):32. doi: 10.1186/s13293-018-0192-8.
Our previous study revealed that adult female rats respond differently to trauma than adult males, recapitulating sex differences in symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) exhibited by women and men. Here, we asked two questions: does the female phenotype depend on (1) social housing condition and/or (2) circulating gonadal hormones?
For the first study, the effects of single prolonged stress (SPS) were compared for females singly or pair-housed. For the second study, adult male and female rats were gonadectomized or sham-gonadectomized 2 weeks prior to exposure to SPS, with half the gonadectomized rats given testosterone. In addition to the typical measures of the trauma response in rats, acoustic startle response (ASR), and the dexamethasone suppression test (DST), we also used two other measures typically used to assess depressive-like responses, social interaction and sucrose preference. Glucocorticoid receptor (GR) expression in the hypothalamus was also examined.
We now report that the distinct trauma response of female rats is not influenced by social housing condition. Moreover, sex differences in the response to SPS based on ASR and DST, replicated in the current study, are independent of adult gonadal hormones. Regardless of hormonal status, traumatized males show a hyper-responsive phenotype whereas traumatized females do not. Moreover, testosterone treatment in adulthood did not masculinize the response to trauma in females. Notably, both sucrose preference and social interaction tests revealed an effect of trauma in females but not in males, with the effects of SPS on sucrose preference dependent on ovarian hormones. Effects of SPS on GR expression in the hypothalamus also depended on gonadal hormones in females.
We propose that the trauma response for female rats is depressive in nature, recapitulating the female bias in PTSD for internalizing symptoms and major depression in contrast to the externalizing symptoms of males. Presumed core markers of PTSD (enhanced ASR and negative feedback control of corticosterone) are apparently relevant only to males and are independent of adult gonadal hormones. Such sex differences in trauma responding are likely determined earlier in life. We conclude that males and females show fundamentally different responses to trauma that do not simply reflect differences in resilience.
我们之前的研究表明,成年雌性大鼠对创伤的反应不同于成年雄性大鼠,这再现了女性和男性创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)症状的性别差异。在这里,我们提出了两个问题:雌性表型是否取决于(1)社交环境条件和/或(2)循环性腺激素?
在第一项研究中,比较了单独饲养或成对饲养的雌性大鼠的单次延长压力(SPS)的影响。在第二项研究中,成年雄性和雌性大鼠在暴露于 SPS 前 2 周进行性腺切除术或假性腺切除术,其中一半性腺切除术大鼠给予睾丸酮。除了大鼠创伤反应的典型测量指标,如听觉惊跳反应(ASR)和地塞米松抑制试验(DST)外,我们还使用了另外两个通常用于评估抑郁样反应的指标,即社交互动和蔗糖偏好。还检查了下丘脑的糖皮质激素受体(GR)表达。
我们现在报告说,雌性大鼠独特的创伤反应不受社交环境条件的影响。此外,在当前研究中复制的基于 ASR 和 DST 的 SPS 反应的性别差异独立于成年性腺激素。无论激素状态如何,创伤后的雄性表现出高反应表型,而创伤后的雌性则没有。此外,成年期的睾丸酮治疗并没有使雌性对创伤的反应男性化。值得注意的是,蔗糖偏好和社交互动测试都显示出创伤对雌性的影响,但对雄性没有影响,SPS 对蔗糖偏好的影响取决于卵巢激素。SPS 对下丘脑 GR 表达的影响也取决于雌性的性腺激素。
我们提出,雌性大鼠的创伤反应本质上是抑郁性的,再现了 PTSD 中女性的偏向于内化症状和重度抑郁症,与男性的外化症状形成对比。假定的 PTSD 核心标志物(增强的 ASR 和皮质酮的负反馈控制)显然仅与雄性相关,并且独立于成年性腺激素。这种对创伤反应的性别差异可能在生命早期就已经确定。我们得出结论,雄性和雌性对创伤的反应截然不同,这并不简单地反映了弹性的差异。