Early life stress alters transcriptomic patterning across reward circuitry in male and female mice

Abuse, neglect, and other forms of early life stress (ELS) significantly increase risk for psychiatric disorders including depression. In this study, we show that ELS in a postnatal sensitive period increases sensitivity to adult stress in female mice, consistent with our earlier findings in male mi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2019-11, Vol.10 (1), p.5098-13, Article 5098
Hauptverfasser: Peña, Catherine Jensen, Smith, Milo, Ramakrishnan, Aarthi, Cates, Hannah M., Bagot, Rosemary C., Kronman, Hope G., Patel, Bhakti, Chang, Austin B., Purushothaman, Immanuel, Dudley, Joel, Morishita, Hirofumi, Shen, Li, Nestler, Eric J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abuse, neglect, and other forms of early life stress (ELS) significantly increase risk for psychiatric disorders including depression. In this study, we show that ELS in a postnatal sensitive period increases sensitivity to adult stress in female mice, consistent with our earlier findings in male mice. We used RNA-sequencing in the ventral tegmental area, nucleus accumbens, and prefrontal cortex of male and female mice to show that adult stress is distinctly represented in the brain’s transcriptome depending on ELS history. We identify: 1) biological pathways disrupted after ELS and associated with increased behavioral stress sensitivity, 2) putative transcriptional regulators of the effect of ELS on adult stress response, and 3) subsets of primed genes specifically associated with latent behavioral changes. We also provide transcriptomic evidence that ELS increases sensitivity to future stress through enhancement of known programs of cortical plasticity. Early life stress alters behavioural response to adult stress in female mice. Here authors transcriptionally profile three brain regions involved in reward (ventral tegmental area, nucleus accumbens, and prefrontal cortex) in both male and female adult mice after early life and/or adult stress
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-019-13085-6