Departments of Anatomy and Neurobiology.
Pediatrics.
J Neurosci. 2021 Jan 27;41(4):648-662. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2146-20.2020. Epub 2020 Dec 1.
Stress may promote emotional and cognitive disturbances, which differ by sex. Adverse outcomes, including memory disturbances, are typically observed following chronic stress, but are now being recognized also after short events, including mass shootings, assault, or natural disasters, events that consist of concurrent multiple acute stresses (MAS). Prior work has established profound and enduring effects of MAS on memory in males. Here we examined the effects of MAS on female mice and probed the role of hormonal fluctuations during the estrous cycle on MAS-induced memory problems and the underlying brain network and cellular mechanisms. Female mice were impacted by MAS in an estrous cycle-dependent manner: MAS impaired hippocampus-dependent spatial memory in early-proestrous mice, characterized by high levels of estradiol, whereas memory of mice stressed during estrus (low estradiol) was spared. As spatial memory requires an intact dorsal hippocampal CA1, we examined synaptic integrity in mice stressed at different cycle phases and found a congruence of dendritic spine density and spatial memory deficits, with reduced spine density only in mice stressed during high estradiol cycle phases. Assessing MAS-induced activation of brain networks interconnected with hippocampus, we identified differential estrous cycle-dependent activation of memory- and stress-related regions, including the amygdala. Network analyses of the cross-correlation of expression among these regions uncovered functional connectivity that differentiated impaired mice from those not impaired by MAS. In conclusion, the estrous cycle modulates the impact of MAS on spatial memory, and fluctuating physiological levels of sex hormones may contribute to this effect. Effects of stress on brain functions, including memory, are profound and sex-dependent. Acute stressors occurring simultaneously result in spatial memory impairments in males, but effects on females are unknown. Here we identified estrous cycle-dependent effects of such stresses on memory in females. Surprisingly, females with higher physiological estradiol experienced stress-induced memory impairment and a loss of underlying synapses. Memory- and stress-responsive brain regions interconnected with hippocampus were differentially activated across high and low estradiol mice, and predicted memory impairment. Thus, at functional, network, and cellular levels, physiological estradiol influences the effects of stress on memory in females, providing insight into mechanisms of prominent sex differences in stress-related memory disorders, such as post-traumatic stress disorder.
压力可能会导致情绪和认知障碍,这些障碍因性别而异。通常在慢性压力后观察到不良后果,包括记忆障碍,但现在也在短时间的事件后,包括大规模枪击事件、袭击或自然灾害中被发现,这些事件包括同时发生的多个急性应激(MAS)。先前的工作已经确定了 MAS 对雄性记忆的深刻和持久影响。在这里,我们研究了 MAS 对雌性小鼠的影响,并探讨了发情周期中激素波动对 MAS 引起的记忆问题以及潜在的大脑网络和细胞机制的作用。雌性小鼠受到 MAS 的影响呈发情周期依赖性:MAS 损害了发情前期雌鼠的海马依赖性空间记忆,其特征是雌二醇水平高,而发情雌鼠(雌二醇水平低)的记忆不受影响。由于空间记忆需要完整的背侧海马 CA1,我们检查了在不同周期阶段应激的小鼠的突触完整性,发现树突棘密度和空间记忆缺陷的一致性,只有在高雌二醇周期阶段应激的小鼠中才出现树突棘密度降低。评估 MAS 诱导的与海马相互连接的大脑网络的激活,我们确定了与记忆和应激相关区域的发情周期依赖性激活的差异,包括杏仁核。这些区域之间的表达的交叉相关网络分析揭示了区分受 MAS 影响的小鼠和不受 MAS 影响的小鼠的功能连接。总之,发情周期调节了 MAS 对空间记忆的影响,而性激素的生理水平波动可能对此有影响。应激对大脑功能的影响,包括记忆,是深刻的且具有性别依赖性的。同时发生的急性应激源会导致雄性的空间记忆障碍,但对女性的影响尚不清楚。在这里,我们确定了这种应激对女性记忆的发情周期依赖性影响。令人惊讶的是,生理雌二醇水平较高的雌性经历了应激诱导的记忆障碍和潜在突触的丧失。与海马相互连接的记忆和应激反应的大脑区域在高雌二醇和低雌二醇的小鼠中表现出不同的激活,并且可以预测记忆障碍。因此,在功能、网络和细胞水平上,生理雌二醇影响了应激对女性记忆的影响,为理解应激相关记忆障碍(如创伤后应激障碍)中的显著性别差异机制提供了线索。