Davignon Lisa-Marie, Brouillard Alexandra, Marin Marie-France
Research Center of the Institut Universitaire en Santé Mentale de Montréal, Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de services sociaux de l'Est-de-l'Île-de-Montréal, 7331 Hochelaga Street, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Department of Psychology, Université du Québec à Montréal, 100 Sherbrooke Street W, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Neuropsychopharmacology. 2025 Aug 30. doi: 10.1038/s41386-025-02208-x.
Estradiol (E2), whether endogenous or administered via oral contraceptives (OCs), modulates fear regulation. However, its role in contextual fear signaling, critical for distinguishing threat from safety, remains poorly understood in humans. While prior human studies focused on cue-related extinction recall, animal research suggests that a single high-dose of exogenous E2 generalizes fear to safe contexts. This study tested whether hormonal status and OC use influence contextual fear responses in humans, and whether OC-related effects are long-lasting and dose-dependent. In a two-day fear conditioning and extinction protocol, 147 healthy participants (men, cycling women, OC users) underwent fear conditioning in a threat-associated context (CX + ) and extinction in a safety-associated context (CX-). On day 2, cues were presented in both contexts. Fear return to each context was assessed via skin conductance responses and brain activations. Groups were formed sequentially using the same participants: (A) by endogenous/exogenous E2 status, (B) by OC use history, and (C) by current ethinyl estradiol (EE) dose. CX- fear returns were elevated in current (p = .015, d = 0.64) and past OC users (p = .014, d = 0.83) compared to never users. High-EE, but not low-EE users, showed greater fear returns than never users (p = .021, d = 0.81). Biological sex and endogenous E2 were unrelated to contextual fear. Across participants, CX- fear returns were negatively associated with hippocampal and ventromedial prefrontal cortex activation. OC use, particularly at higher EE doses, may impair retrieval of safety signals from context, with effects persisting beyond discontinuation. These findings highlight exogenous hormones as a modulator of contextual fear regulation in women.
雌二醇(E2),无论是内源性的还是通过口服避孕药(OCs)摄入的,都能调节恐惧调节。然而,其在情境恐惧信号传导中的作用,这对于区分威胁和安全至关重要,在人类中仍知之甚少。虽然先前的人体研究集中在与线索相关的消退回忆上,但动物研究表明,单次高剂量的外源性E2会将恐惧泛化到安全情境中。本研究测试了激素状态和OCs的使用是否会影响人类的情境恐惧反应,以及与OCs相关的影响是否持久且剂量依赖性。在一个为期两天的恐惧条件化和消退实验方案中,147名健康参与者(男性、处于月经周期的女性、OCs使用者)在与威胁相关的情境(CX +)中接受恐惧条件化,并在与安全相关的情境(CX -)中接受消退。在第2天,在两种情境中都呈现线索。通过皮肤电反应和大脑激活来评估对每种情境的恐惧恢复情况。使用相同的参与者依次形成组:(A)根据内源性/外源性E2状态,(B)根据OCs使用历史,(C)根据当前炔雌醇(EE)剂量。与从未使用者相比,当前(p = 0.015,d = 0.64)和过去的OCs使用者(p = 0.014,d = 0.83)的CX - 恐惧恢复升高。高EE使用者,但不是低EE使用者,比从未使用者表现出更大的恐惧恢复(p = 0.021,d = 0.81)。生理性别和内源性E2与情境恐惧无关。在所有参与者中,CX - 恐惧恢复与海马体和腹内侧前额叶皮层激活呈负相关。OCs的使用,特别是在较高EE剂量时,可能会损害从情境中检索安全信号的能力,其影响在停药后仍会持续。这些发现突出了外源性激素作为女性情境恐惧调节的调节剂。