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Adolescent Stress Confers Resilience to Traumatic Stress Later in Life: Role of the Prefrontal Cortex.


ABSTRACT:

Background

Adolescent brains are sensitive to stressors. However, under certain circumstances, developmental stress can promote an adaptive phenotype, allowing individuals to cope better with adverse situations in adulthood, thereby contributing to resilience.

Methods

Sprague Dawley rats (50 males, 48 females) were subjected to adolescent chronic variable stress (adol CVS) for 2 weeks at postnatal day 45. At postnatal day 85, a group was subjected to single prolonged stress (SPS). After a week, animals were evaluated in an auditory-cued fear conditioning paradigm, and neuronal recruitment during reinstatement was assessed by Fos expression. Patch clamp electrophysiology (17-35 cells/group) was performed in male rats to examine physiological changes associated with resilience.

Results

Adol CVS blocked fear potentiation evoked by SPS. We observed that SPS impaired extinction (males) and enhanced reinstatement (both sexes) of the conditioned freezing response. Prior adol CVS prevented both effects. SPS effects were associated with a reduction of infralimbic (IL) cortex neuronal recruitment after reinstatement in males and increased engagement of the central amygdala in females, both also prevented by adol CVS, suggesting different neurocircuits involved in generating resilience between sexes. We explored the mechanism behind reduced IL recruitment in males by studying the intrinsic excitability of IL pyramidal neurons. SPS reduced excitability of IL neurons, and prior adol CVS prevented this effect.

Conclusions

Our data indicate that adolescent stress can impart resilience to the effects of traumatic stress on neuroplasticity and behavior. Our data provide a mechanistic link behind developmental stress-induced behavioral resilience and prefrontal (IL) cortical excitability in males.

SUBMITTER: Cotella EM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10140393 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Apr

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Adolescent Stress Confers Resilience to Traumatic Stress Later in Life: Role of the Prefrontal Cortex.

Cotella Evelin M EM   Nawreen Nawshaba N   Moloney Rachel D RD   Martelle Susan E SE   Oshima Kristen M KM   Lemen Paige P   NiBlack Jordan N JN   Julakanti Reetu R RR   Fitzgerald Maureen M   Baccei Mark L ML   Herman James P JP  

Biological psychiatry global open science 20220308 2


<h4>Background</h4>Adolescent brains are sensitive to stressors. However, under certain circumstances, developmental stress can promote an adaptive phenotype, allowing individuals to cope better with adverse situations in adulthood, thereby contributing to resilience.<h4>Methods</h4>Sprague Dawley rats (50 males, 48 females) were subjected to adolescent chronic variable stress (adol CVS) for 2 weeks at postnatal day 45. At postnatal day 85, a group was subjected to single prolonged stress (SPS).  ...[more]

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