Corticosterone after acute stress prevents the delayed effects on the amygdala

被引:0
作者
Prabahan Chakraborty
Siddhartha Datta
Bruce S. McEwen
Sumantra Chattarji
机构
[1] National Centre for Biological Sciences,Laboratory of Neuroendocrinology
[2] Centre for Brain Development and Repair,Centre for Discovery Brain Sciences, Deanery of Biomedical Sciences
[3] Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine,Institut de Genomique Fonctionnelle, Inserm U1191, CNRS UMR5203
[4] The Rockefeller University,undefined
[5] University of Edinburgh,undefined
[6] University of Montpellier,undefined
[7] National Centre for Biological Sciences,undefined
[8] GKVK Campus,undefined
来源
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2020年 / 45卷
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摘要
Even a single 2-hour episode of immobilization stress is known to trigger anxiety-like behavior and increase spine-density in the basolateral amygdala (BLA) of rats 10 days later. This delayed build-up of morphological and behavioral effects offers a stress-free time window of intervention after acute stress, which we used to test a protective role for glucocorticoids against stress. We observed that post-stress corticosterone, given 1 day after acute stress in drinking water, reversed enhanced anxiety-like behavior 10 days later. Quantification of spine-density on Golgi-stained BLA principal neurons showed that the same intervention also prevented the increase in spine numbers in the amygdala, at the same delayed time-point. Further, stress elevated serum corticosterone levels in rats that received vehicle in the drinking water. However, when stress was followed 24 h later by corticosterone in the drinking water, the surge in corticosterone was prevented. Together, these observations suggest that corticosterone, delivered through drinking water even 24 h after acute stress, is capable of reversing the delayed enhancing effects on BLA synaptic connectivity and anxiety-like behavior. Strikingly, although the immobilization-induced surge in corticosterone by itself has delayed detrimental effects on amygdalar structure and function, there exists a window of opportunity even after stress to mitigate its impact with a second surge of exogenously administered corticosterone. This provides a framework in the amygdala for analyzing how the initial physiological and endocrine processes triggered by traumatic stress eventually give rise to debilitating emotional symptoms, as well as the protective effects of glucocorticoids against their development.
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页码:2139 / 2146
页数:7
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