压力和细胞因子对学习的影响:性与之有何关系?

Kevin D Beck, Richard J Servatius
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引用次数: 18

摘要

许多研究都暗示了压力后行为的两性二态变化。尽管许多人认为这些变化是压力引起的学习和记忆变化的功能,但关于这些学习和记忆任务的表现是否受到压力引起的驱动变化的影响,而不是实际的学习和记忆过程的影响,仍然存在疑问。我们使用经典条件眨眼反应(CCER)来确定女性在压力下学习缓慢是否可以用无条件反应(UR)振幅的变化来解释,无条件反应(UR)振幅是压力引起的感觉反应转移的标志。此外,我们有第二个治疗组注射促炎细胞因子il -1 β作为内感受性应激条件,这是一种对动物刺激最小的生理应激源。复制Shors及其同事的工作,我们发现应激雌性大鼠获得条件反应(CR)较慢,但我们也发现il -1 β注射导致CR获得减慢。然而,在这两种情况下,治疗组的UR振幅都较低。我们通过声惊吓反应(ASR)测试感觉反应性来跟踪这些结果,其中ASR的大小在相同剂量的il -1 - β方案下略有降低,但不显著。总之,这些实验表明,尾震应激和免疫信号(il -1 β)降低了CCER中使用的感觉反应性和刺激的显著性,导致雌性大鼠学习速度变慢。
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Stress and cytokine effects on learning: what does sex have to do with it?

Many studies have alluded to sexually dimorphic changes in behavior following stress. Although many have suggested that these changes are a function of stress-induced changes in learning and memory, there are questions regarding whether performance in those learning and memory tasks are influenced by stress-induced changes in drive more than in actual learning and memory processes. We used the classically conditioned eyeblink response (CCER) to determine whether slowed learning following stress in females can be explained by changes in unconditional response (UR) amplitude, a sign of a stress-induced shift in sensory reactivity. In addition, we had a second treatment group injected with the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-1beta to serve as an interoceptive stress condition, a physiological stressor with minimal stimulation to the animal. Replicating the work by Shors and colleagues, we found that stressed female rats had slower acquisition of the conditioned response (CR), but we also found that an IL-1beta injection leads to a slowing of CR acquisition. However, in both cases, UR amplitude was lower in the treatment groups. We followed up these results by testing sensory reactivity through the acoustic startle response (ASR), where the magnitude of the ASR was marginally, but nonsignificantly, reduced by the same dose regimen of IL-1beta. Together, these experiments suggest that tailshock stress and immune signaling (IL-1beta) reduce sensory reactivity and the saliency of the stimuli used in the CCER, leading to slower learning in female rats.

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