A Key Role for Neurotensin in Chronic-Stress-Induced Anxiety-Like Behavior in Rats

被引:0
|
作者
Catherine P Normandeau
Ana Paula Ventura-Silva
Emily R Hawken
Staci Angelis
Calvin Sjaarda
Xudong Liu
José Miguel Pêgo
É C Dumont
机构
[1] Center for Neuroscience Studies,Department of Biomedical and Molecular Sciences
[2] Queen’s University,undefined
[3] Queen’s University,undefined
[4] Life and Health Sciences Research Institute (ICVS),undefined
[5] School of Health Sciences,undefined
[6] University of Minho,undefined
[7] ICVS/3B’s—PT Government Associate Laboratory,undefined
[8] Queen’s Genomics Lab at Ongwanada (QGLO),undefined
[9] Queen’s University,undefined
来源
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2018年 / 43卷
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摘要
Chronic stress is a major cause of anxiety disorders that can be reliably modeled preclinically, providing insight into alternative therapeutic targets for this mental health illness. Neuropeptides have been targeted in the past to no avail possibly due to our lack of understanding of their role in pathological models. In this study we use a rat model of chronic stress-induced anxiety-like behaviors and hypothesized that neuropeptidergic modulation of synaptic transmission would be altered in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST), a brain region suspected to contribute to anxiety disorders. We use brain slice neurophysiology and behavioral pharmacology to compare the role of locally released endogenous neuropeptides on synaptic transmission in the oval (ov) BNST of non-stressed (NS) or chronic unpredictably stressed (CUS) rats. We found that in NS rats, post-synaptic depolarization induced the release of vesicular neurotensin (NT) and corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) that co-acted to increase ovBNST inhibitory synaptic transmission in 59% of recorded neurons. CUS bolstered this potentiation (100% of recorded neurons) through an enhanced contribution of NT over CRF. In contrast, locally released opioid neuropeptides decreased ovBNST excitatory synaptic transmission in all recorded neurons, regardless of stress. Consistent with CUS-induced enhanced modulatory effects of NT, blockade of ovBNST NT receptors completely abolished stress-induced anxiety-like behaviors in the elevated plus maze paradigm. The role of NT has been largely unexplored in stress and our findings highlight its potential contribution to an important behavioral consequence of chronic stress, that is, exaggerated avoidance of open space in rats.
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页码:285 / 293
页数:8
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