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  4. Blunted Glucocorticoid Responsiveness to Stress Causes Behavioral and Biological Alterations That Lead to Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Vulnerability
 
research article

Blunted Glucocorticoid Responsiveness to Stress Causes Behavioral and Biological Alterations That Lead to Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Vulnerability

Monari, Silvia  
•
Guillot de Suduiraut, Isabelle  
•
Grosse, Jocelyn  
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2023
Biological Psychiatry

Background: Understanding why only a subset of trauma-exposed individuals develop posttraumatic stress disorder is critical for advancing clinical strategies. A few behavioral (deficits in fear extinction) and biological (blunted glucocorticoid levels, small hippocampal size, and rapid-eye-movement sleep [REMS] disturbances) traits have been identified as potential vulnerability factors. However, whether and to what extent these traits are interrelated and whether one of them could causally engender the others are not known. Methods In a genetically selected rat model of reduced corticosterone responsiveness to stress, we explored posttraumatic stress disorder–related biobehavioral traits using ex vivo magnetic resonance imaging, cued fear conditioning, and polysomnographic recordings combined with in vivo photometric measurements. Results: We showed that genetic selection for blunted glucocorticoid responsiveness led to a correlated multitrait response, including impaired fear extinction (observed in males but not in females), small hippocampal volume, and REMS disturbances, supporting their interrelatedness. Fear extinction deficits and concomitant disruptions in REMS could be normalized through postextinction corticosterone administration, causally implicating glucocorticoid deficiency in two core posttraumatic stress disorder–related risk factors and manifestations. Furthermore, reduced REMS was accompanied by higher norepinephrine levels in the hippocampal dentate gyrus that were also reversed by postextinction corticosterone treatment. Conclusions: Our results indicate a predominant role for glucocorticoid deficiency over the contribution of reduced hippocampal volume in engendering both REMS alterations and associated deficits in fear extinction consolidation, and they causally implicate blunted glucocorticoids in sustaining neurophysiological disturbances that lead to fear extinction deficits.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.biopsych.2023.09.015
Author(s)
Monari, Silvia  
Guillot de Suduiraut, Isabelle  
Grosse, Jocelyn  
Zanoletti, Olivia  
Walker, Sophie E.  
Mesquita, Michel
Wood, Tobias C.
Cash, Diana
Astori, Simone  
Sandi, Carmen  
Date Issued

2023

Published in
Biological Psychiatry
Subjects

Fear extinction

•

Glucocorticoids

•

Hippocampus

•

Norepinephrine

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PTSD

•

REM sleep

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LGC  
FunderGrant Number

FNS-NCCR

158776

EU funding

603016

FNS

189061

Available on Infoscience
November 13, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/202122
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