重复性轻度脑外伤对促皮质素释放因子调节外侧脑室兴奋性和动机行为的影响

IF 3.9 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of neurotrauma Pub Date : 2024-07-18 DOI:10.1089/neu.2024.0184
William J Flerlage, Sarah C Simmons, Emily H Thomas, Shawn Gouty, Mumeko C Tsuda, T John Wu, Regina C Armstrong, Brian M Cox, Fereshteh S Nugent
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引用次数: 0

摘要

轻度创伤性脑损伤(mTBI)是一种严重的健康负担,其原因是与轻度创伤性脑损伤相关的慢性认知衰弱和精神疾病。我们实验室最近的证据表明,奖赏/动机回路功能可能在皮层下结构--外侧哈文脑(LHb)--水平出现失调,我们证明了在青春期晚期(约 8 周大时)暴露于轻度创伤性脑损伤时,外侧哈文脑亢进在轻度创伤性脑损伤诱发的年轻成年雄性小鼠自理梳理行为动机缺陷中的因果作用。在这里,我们扩展了这一观察结果,进一步确定了这种重复性闭合性头部损伤模型对年轻成年雄性和雌性小鼠 LHb 兴奋性、促肾上腺皮质激素释放因子(CRF)对 LHb 活动的调节、自我护理行为动机的行为反应以及在社交或威胁相关刺激下的接近与回避行为的神经行为学影响。我们的研究表明,mTBI能增加雌性小鼠的LHb自发强直活动,这与我们之前在雄性小鼠身上观察到的结果相似,同时还能促进雌雄小鼠的LHb神经元过度兴奋和超极化诱导的LHb爆发。有趣的是,mTBI 只提高雄性小鼠 LHb 的固有兴奋性,同时提高超极化激活阳离子电流(HCN/Ih)的水平,降低 M 型钾电流的水平,同时增强 M 型电流,而不改变雌性小鼠 LHb 神经元的固有兴奋性。由于大脑 CRF 系统的持续失调被认为是导致慢性精神疾病的原因之一,而 LHb 神经元对 CRF 具有很高的反应性,因此我们测试了 mTBI 后 LHb CRF 子系统是否参与其中。我们发现,体外抑制 LHb 内的 CRF 受体 1 型(CRFR1)可逆转 mTBI 诱导的 LHb 强直性活动增强以及男女 LHb 的过度兴奋,这表明 LHb 内 CRF-CRFR1 介导的信号增强有助于 mTBI 后 LHb 的整体过度活动。mTBI还改变了雌雄小鼠在阴影笼罩任务中的防御行为,使雌雄小鼠在应对空中威胁时的先天防御行为转向更被动的行动锁定而非逃跑行为,并延长了雌性小鼠逃跑反应的潜伏期。虽然这种创伤性脑损伤模型降低了雄性小鼠的社会偏好,但却诱导雄性和雌性小鼠在新的社会遭遇中产生更高的社会新奇性寻求。总之,我们的研究为使用这种 mTBI 临床前模型研究与 mTBI 相关的奖赏回路功能障碍和与情绪/动机相关的行为缺陷提供了进一步的转化有效性,同时也发现了这种模型的一些性别二形性神经行为效应,这些效应可能会对青春期晚期遭受这种类型 mTBI 损伤的雌性和雄性小鼠产生不同的影响。
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Effects of Repetitive Mild Traumatic Brain Injury on Corticotropin-Releasing Factor Modulation of Lateral Habenula Excitability and Motivated Behavior.

Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is a significant health burden due to mTBI-related chronic debilitating cognitive and psychiatric morbidities. Recent evidence from our laboratory suggests a possible dysregulation within reward/motivational circuit function at the level of a subcortical structure, the lateral habenula (LHb), where we demonstrated a causal role for hyperactive LHb in mTBI-induced motivational deficits in self-care grooming behavior in young adult male mice when exposed to mTBI during late adolescence (at ∼8 weeks old). In this study, we extended this observation by further characterizing neurobehavioral effects of this repetitive closed head injury model of mTBI in both young adult male and female mice on LHb excitability, corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) modulation of LHb activity, and behavioral responses of motivation to self-care behavior and approach versus avoidance behavior in the presence of a social- or threat-related stimulus. We show that mTBI increases LHb spontaneous tonic activity in female mice similar to what we previously observed in male mice, as well as promoting LHb neuronal hyperexcitability and hyperpolarization-induced LHb bursting in both male and female mice. Interestingly, mTBI only increases LHb intrinsic excitability in male mice coincident with higher levels of the hyperpolarization-activated cation currents (HCN/Ih) and reduces levels of the M-type potassium currents while potentiating M-currents without altering intrinsic excitability in LHb neurons of female mice. Because persistent dysregulation of brain CRF systems is suggested to contribute to chronic psychiatric morbidities and that LHb neurons are highly responsive to CRF, we tested whether the LHb CRF subsystem becomes engaged following mTBI. We found that in vitro inhibition of CRF receptor type 1 (CRFR1) within the LHb reverses mTBI-induced enhancement of LHb tonic activity and hyperexcitability in both sexes, suggesting that an augmented intra-LHb CRF-CRFR1-mediated signaling contributes to the overall LHb hyperactivity following mTBI. Behaviorally, mTBI diminishes motivation for self-care grooming in female mice as in male mice. mTBI also alters defensive behaviors in the looming shadow task by shifting the innate defensive behaviors toward more passive action locking rather than escape behaviors in response to an aerial threat in both male and female mice, as well as prolonging the latency to escape responses in female mice. While this model of mTBI reduces social preference in male mice, it induces higher social novelty seeking during the novel social encounters in both male and female mice. Overall, our study provides further translational validity for the use of this pre-clinical model of mTBI for investigation of mTBI-related reward circuit dysfunction and mood/motivation-related behavioral deficits in both sexes while uncovering a few sexually dimorphic neurobehavioral effects of this model that may differentially affect young males and females when exposed to this type of mTBI during late adolescence.

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来源期刊
Journal of neurotrauma
Journal of neurotrauma 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
9.20
自引率
7.10%
发文量
233
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Neurotrauma is the flagship, peer-reviewed publication for reporting on the latest advances in both the clinical and laboratory investigation of traumatic brain and spinal cord injury. The Journal focuses on the basic pathobiology of injury to the central nervous system, while considering preclinical and clinical trials targeted at improving both the early management and long-term care and recovery of traumatically injured patients. This is the essential journal publishing cutting-edge basic and translational research in traumatically injured human and animal studies, with emphasis on neurodegenerative disease research linked to CNS trauma.
期刊最新文献
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