Research Group "Social Stress and Family Health", Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany; Leibniz Institute for Resilience Research, Mainz, Germany.
Research Group "Social Stress and Family Health", Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany.
Neuroimage. 2021 Aug 1;236:118011. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118011. Epub 2021 Apr 20.
The hippocampus is a highly plastic brain structure supporting functions central to human cognition. Morphological changes in the hippocampus have been implicated in development, aging, as well as in a broad range of neurological and psychiatric disorders. A growing body of research suggests that hippocampal plasticity is closely linked to the actions of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). However, evidence on the relationship between hippocampal volume (HCV) and peripheral BDNF levels is scarce and limited to elderly and patient populations. Further, despite evidence that BDNF expression differs throughout the hippocampus and is implicated in adult neurogenesis specifically in the dentate gyrus, no study has so far related peripheral BDNF levels to the volumes of individual hippocampal subfields. Besides its clinical implications, BDNF-facilitated hippocampal plasticity plays an important role in regulating cognitive and affective processes. In the current registered report, we investigated how serum BDNF (sBDNF) levels relate to volumes of the hippocampal formation and its subfields in a large sample of healthy adults (N = 279, 160 f) with a broad age range (20-55 years, mean 40.5) recruited in the context of the ReSource Project. We related HCV to basal sBDNF and, in a subsample (n = 103, 57 f), to acute stress-reactive change in sBDNF. We further tested the role of age as a moderator of both associations. Contrary to our hypotheses, neither basal sBDNF levels nor stress-reactive sBDNF change were associated with total HCV or volume of the dentate gyrus/cornu ammonis 4 (DG/CA4) subfield. We also found no evidence for a moderating effect of age on any of these associations. Our null results provide a first point of reference on the relationship between sBDNF and HCV in healthy mid-age, in contrast to patient or aging populations. We suggest that sBDNF levels have limited predictive value for morphological differences of the hippocampal structure when notable challenge to its neuronal integrity or to neurotrophic capacity is absent.
海马体是一个高度可塑的脑结构,支持着人类认知的核心功能。海马体的形态变化与发育、衰老以及广泛的神经和精神疾病有关。越来越多的研究表明,海马体的可塑性与脑源性神经营养因子(BDNF)的作用密切相关。然而,关于海马体体积(HCV)与外周 BDNF 水平之间关系的证据很少,并且仅限于老年人和患者群体。此外,尽管有证据表明 BDNF 表达在整个海马体中存在差异,并特别在齿状回中与成人神经发生有关,但迄今为止,没有研究将外周 BDNF 水平与单个海马体亚区的体积联系起来。除了其临床意义外,BDNF 促进的海马体可塑性在调节认知和情感过程中也起着重要作用。在当前注册的报告中,我们在 ReSource 项目的背景下,在一个年龄范围广泛(20-55 岁,平均年龄 40.5)的健康成年人样本中(N=279,160 名女性)中,调查了血清 BDNF(sBDNF)水平与海马体及其亚区体积之间的关系。我们将 HCV 与基础 sBDNF 相关联,并且在一个子样本(n=103,57 名女性)中,将其与 sBDNF 的急性应激反应变化相关联。我们进一步测试了年龄作为这两种关联的调节剂的作用。与我们的假设相反,基础 sBDNF 水平或应激反应性 sBDNF 变化均与总 HCV 或齿状回/CA4 亚区的体积无关。我们也没有发现年龄对这些关联的任何调节作用的证据。我们的零结果提供了健康中年人群中 sBDNF 和 HCV 之间关系的第一个参考点,与患者或老年人群相反。我们认为,当对其神经元完整性或神经营养能力没有明显挑战时,sBDNF 水平对海马体结构的形态差异具有有限的预测价值。