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Chronic stress prior to pregnancy potentiated long-lasting postpartum depressive-like behavior, regulated by Akt-mTOR signaling in the hippocampus
- Source :
- Scientific Reports
- Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- Postpartum depression (PPD) affects over 10% of new mothers and adversely impacts the health of offspring. One of the greatest risk factors for PPD is prepregnancy stress but the underlying biological mechanism is unknown. Here we constructed an animal model which recapitulated prepregnancy stress induced PPD and tested the role of Akt-mTOR signaling in the hippocampus. Female virgin Balb/c mice received chronic restraint stress, followed by co-housing with a normal male mouse. We found that the chronic stress led to a transient depressive-like condition that disappeared within two weeks. However, prepregnantly stressed females developed long-term postpartum depressive-like (PPD-like) symptoms as indicated by deficient performance in tests of sucrose preference, forced swim, and novelty-suppressed feeding. Chronic stress induced transient decrease in Akt-mTOR signaling and altered expressions of glutamate receptor subunits NR1 and GluR1, in contrast to long-term deficits in Akt-mTOR signaling, GluR1/NR1 ratio, and hippocampal neurogenesis in PPD-like mice. Acute ketamine improved the molecular signaling abnormality, and reversed the behavioral deficits in PPD-like mice in a rapid and persistent manner, in contrast to ineffectiveness by chronic fluoxetine treatment. Taken together, we find that chronic prepregnancy stress potentiates a long-term PPD, in which Akt-mTOR signaling may play a crucial role.
- Subjects :
- Postpartum depression
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Offspring
Neuregulin-1
Hippocampus
Article
Depression, Postpartum
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Pregnancy
Internal medicine
medicine
Animals
Humans
Chronic stress
Receptors, AMPA
Protein kinase B
Fluoxetine
Multidisciplinary
business.industry
TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases
Neurogenesis
Glutamate receptor
medicine.disease
030227 psychiatry
Disease Models, Animal
Endocrinology
Female
Ketamine
business
Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Stress, Psychological
medicine.drug
Signal Transduction
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 20452322
- Volume :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Scientific reports
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....766139ef54b4d1d2a55cdf3f189cfc56