Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience (Oct 2020)

Insidious Transmission of a Stress-Related Neuroadaptation

  • Jennifer S. Steger,
  • Jennifer S. Steger,
  • Jennifer S. Steger,
  • Benjamin B. Land,
  • Benjamin B. Land,
  • Julia C. Lemos,
  • Charles Chavkin,
  • Charles Chavkin,
  • Paul E. M. Phillips,
  • Paul E. M. Phillips,
  • Paul E. M. Phillips

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2020.564054
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Stress is highly pervasive in humans, impacting motivated behaviors with an enormous toll on life quality. Many of the effects of stress are orchestrated by neuropeptides such as corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF). It has previously been shown that in stress-naïve male mice, CRF acts in the core of the nucleus accumbens (NAc) to produce appetitive effects and to increase dopamine release; yet in stress-exposed male mice, CRF loses its capacity to modulate NAc dopamine release and is aversive. In the current research, we tested whether this effect is comparable in females to males and whether the neuroadaptation is susceptible to social transmission. We found that, like in males, CRF increased dopamine release in stress-naïve but not stress-exposed female mice. Importantly, this persistent physiological change was not accompanied by overt behavioral changes that would be indicative of depression- or anxiety-like phenotype. Nonetheless, when these mice were housed for 7 days with stress-naïve conspecifics, the cage mates also exhibited a loss of dopamine potentiation by CRF. These data demonstrate the asymptomatic, yet pervasive transmission of stress-related neuroadaptations in the population.

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