Fee Corey, Prevot Thomas, Misquitta Keith, Banasr Mounira, Sibille Etienne
Campbell Family Mental Health Research Institute, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, ON, Canada; Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Campbell Family Mental Health Research Institute, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, ON, Canada; Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Neuroscience. 2020 Aug 1;440:113-129. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2020.05.034. Epub 2020 May 27.
Altered activity of corticolimbic brain regions is a hallmark of stress-related illnesses, including mood disorders, neurodegenerative diseases, and substance abuse disorders. Acute stress adaptively recruits brain region-specific functions for coping, while sustained activation under chronic stress may overwhelm feedback mechanisms and lead to pathological cellular and behavioral responses. The neural mechanisms underlying dysregulated stress responses and how they contribute to behavioral deficits are poorly characterized. Here, we tested whether prior exposure to chronic restraint stress (CRS) or unpredictable chronic mild stress (UCMS) in mice could alter functional response to acute stress and whether these changes are associated with chronic stress-induced behavioral deficits. More specifically, we assessed acute stress-induced functional activation indexed by c-Fos+ cell counts in 24 stress- and mood-related brain regions, and determined if changes in functional activation were linked to chronic stress-induced behavioral impairments, summarized across dimensions through principal component analysis (PCA). Results indicated that CRS and UCMS led to convergent physiological and anxiety-like deficits, whereas working and short-term memory were impaired only in UCMS mice. CRS and UCMS exposure exacerbated functional activation by acute stress in anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) area 24b and ventral hippocampal (vHPC) CA1, CA3, and subiculum. In dysregulated brain regions, levels of functional activation were positively correlated with principal components reflecting variance across behavioral deficits relevant to stress-related disorders. Our data supports an association between a dysregulated stress response, altered functional corticolimbic excitation/inhibition balance, and the expression of maladaptive behaviors.
皮质边缘脑区活动的改变是与应激相关疾病的一个标志,这些疾病包括情绪障碍、神经退行性疾病和物质滥用障碍。急性应激会适应性地调动特定脑区的功能来应对,而慢性应激下的持续激活可能会使反馈机制不堪重负,并导致病理性的细胞和行为反应。应激反应失调的神经机制以及它们如何导致行为缺陷,目前还知之甚少。在这里,我们测试了小鼠先前暴露于慢性束缚应激(CRS)或不可预测的慢性轻度应激(UCMS)是否会改变对急性应激的功能反应,以及这些变化是否与慢性应激诱导的行为缺陷有关。更具体地说,我们评估了由24个与应激和情绪相关的脑区中c-Fos+细胞计数所索引的急性应激诱导的功能激活,并通过主成分分析(PCA)确定功能激活的变化是否与慢性应激诱导的行为损伤相关,这些损伤在各个维度上进行了总结。结果表明,CRS和UCMS导致了趋同的生理和焦虑样缺陷,而工作记忆和短期记忆仅在UCMS小鼠中受损。CRS和UCMS暴露加剧了急性应激在前扣带回皮质(ACC)24b区以及腹侧海马(vHPC)CA1、CA3和下托中的功能激活。在失调的脑区中,功能激活水平与反映与应激相关障碍相关的行为缺陷方差的主成分呈正相关。我们的数据支持应激反应失调、皮质边缘兴奋/抑制平衡改变与适应不良行为表达之间的关联。