Late glucocorticoid receptor antagonism changes the outcome of adult life stress

Jinlan Ding, Marcia Santos da Silva, Jolanthe Lingeman, Xinzhao Chen, Yuxiu Shi, Fang Han, Onno C Meijer, Jinlan Ding, Marcia Santos da Silva, Jolanthe Lingeman, Xinzhao Chen, Yuxiu Shi, Fang Han, Onno C Meijer

Abstract

Background: Stressors activate a wide spectrum of interacting hormonal and neuronal systems resulting in behavioral and physiological responses, with consequences for the development of psychopathology. Several recent studies demonstrated that treatment with the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) antagonist RU486 during adulthood normalized effects of early life stress. We aimed to evaluate the potential of RU486 to reverse stress-induced changes in an animal model of adult stress.

Method: We employed the single-prolonged stress (SPS) model as a multimodal stress exposure protocol in male rats. SPS rats and unstressed controls were treated with RU486 on days 8, 9, 10 after stress exposure and the effects of treatment were evaluated after another 4 days. We determined body weight gain, corticosterone levels, behavioral reactivity in anxiety tests, and brain gene expression of c-fos, corticosteroid receptors, drivers of the stress response and genes (epi-)genitally linked to PTSD.

Results: RU486 affected body weight gain, corticosterone levels and open field behavior only in SPS rats. RU486 had history-independent effects in reducing fear in the elevated plus maze and fear conditioning behavior. Gene expression analysis showed a diversity of in- and interdependent effects of stress and RU486.

Conclusion: The effects of RU486 applied 1 week after stress and measured 4 days after treatment demonstrate that in the state of post-SPS the GR-dependence of homeostatic processes has changed. This suggests that GR-mediated processes are part of allostatic regulation after adult stress. The normalization of a number of SPS-effects after RU486 treatment reinforces the potential of targeting GR for treatment of stress-related psychopathologies.

Keywords: Affective disorders; Limbic brain; Mifepristone; PACAP; PTSD.

Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.

Source: PubMed

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