Handa Robert J, Sheng Julietta A, Castellanos Emily A, Templeton Hayley N, McGivern Robert F
Department of Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA.
Department of Psychology, San Diego State University, San Diego, California 92120, USA
Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol. 2022 Jun 6;14(9). doi: 10.1101/cshperspect.a039081.
Sex differences in the neuroendocrine response to acute stress occur in both animals and humans. In rodents, stressors such as restraint and novelty induce a greater activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA) in females compared to males. The nature of this difference arises from steroid actions during development (organizational effects) and adulthood (activational effects). Androgens decrease HPA stress responsivity to acute stress, while estradiol increases it. Androgenic down-regulation of HPA responsiveness is mediated by the binding of testosterone (T) and dihydrotestosterone (DHT) to the androgen receptor, as well as the binding of the DHT metabolite, 3β-diol, to the β form of the estrogen receptor (ERβ). Estradiol binding to the α form of the estrogen receptor (ERα) increases HPA responsivity. Studies of human sex differences are relatively few and generally employ a psychosocial paradigm to measure stress-related HPA activation. Men consistently show greater HPA reactivity than women when being evaluated for achievement. Some studies have found greater reactivity in women when being evaluated for social performance. The pattern is inconsistent with rodent studies but may involve the differential nature of the stressors employed. Psychosocial stress is nonphysical and invokes a significant degree of top-down processing that is not easily comparable to the types of stressors employed in rodents. Gender identity may also be a factor based on recent work showing that it influences the neural processing of positive and negative emotional stimuli independent of genetic sex. Comparing different types of stressors and how they interact with gender identity and genetic sex will provide a better understanding of sex steroid influences on stress-related HPA reactivity.
动物和人类在对急性应激的神经内分泌反应上都存在性别差异。在啮齿动物中,与雄性相比,诸如束缚和新奇环境等应激源会使雌性的下丘脑 - 垂体 - 肾上腺轴(HPA)产生更大的激活。这种差异的本质源于发育过程中的类固醇作用(组织效应)和成年期的作用(激活效应)。雄激素会降低HPA对急性应激的反应性,而雌二醇则会增加其反应性。HPA反应性的雄激素下调是由睾酮(T)和双氢睾酮(DHT)与雄激素受体的结合,以及DHT代谢产物3β - 二醇与雌激素受体β(ERβ)的β形式的结合介导的。雌二醇与雌激素受体α(ERα)的α形式结合会增加HPA反应性。关于人类性别差异的研究相对较少,并且通常采用社会心理范式来测量与应激相关的HPA激活。在评估成就时,男性始终表现出比女性更高的HPA反应性。一些研究发现,在评估社交表现时女性的反应性更高。这种模式与啮齿动物的研究不一致,但可能涉及所采用应激源的不同性质。社会心理应激是非身体性的,会引发大量自上而下的加工过程,这与啮齿动物所采用的应激源类型不易比较。基于最近的研究表明性别认同会独立于基因性别影响正负情绪刺激的神经加工,所以性别认同也可能是一个因素。比较不同类型的应激源以及它们如何与性别认同和基因性别相互作用,将有助于更好地理解性类固醇对应激相关HPA反应性的影响。