The ventral tegmental area dopamine (VTA-DA) mesolimbic circuit processes emotional, motivational, and social reward associations together with their more demanding cognitive aspects that involve... Show moreThe ventral tegmental area dopamine (VTA-DA) mesolimbic circuit processes emotional, motivational, and social reward associations together with their more demanding cognitive aspects that involve the mesocortical circuitry. Coping with stress increases VTA-DA excitability, but when the stressor becomes chronic the VTA-DA circuit is less active, which may lead to degeneration and local microglial activation. This switch between activation and inhibition of VTA-DA neurons is modulated by e.g. corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), opioids, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), and the adrenal glucocorticoids. These actions are coordinated with energy-demanding stress-coping styles to promote behavioral adaptation. The VTA circuits show sexual dimorphism that is programmed by sex hormones during perinatal life in a manner that can be affected by glucocorticoid exposure. We conclude that insight in the role of stress in VTA-DA plasticity and connectivity, during reward processing and stress-coping, will be helpful to better understand the mechanism of resilience to breakdown of adaptation. Show less
Schizophrenia is a devastating mental disorder characterized by a hyperactive dopamine system and deregulated stress system. Human studies have suggested that the schizophrenia symptoms precipitate... Show moreSchizophrenia is a devastating mental disorder characterized by a hyperactive dopamine system and deregulated stress system. Human studies have suggested that the schizophrenia symptoms precipitate if a hyperactive dopaminergic genotype interacts with adverse life experiences that activate the stress system. To examine this gene-by-environment interaction, we exposed rats genetically-selected for enhanced apomorphine susceptibility to two stress-provoking life events, poor maternal care early-in-life, and isolation rearing later-in-life. This promoted the development of schizophrenia endophenotypes. Our experiments involved two complementary steps: First, we focused on the immediate endocrine adaptations to maternal separation in common rats. It is known that a single episode of prolonged maternal separation slowly increases corticosterone levels in the neonate rat. We discovered that if the pups had been previously exposed to maternal separation, this rise in corticosterone was abolished, suggesting that the pups had learned to predict the return of the dam. While readily adapting to repeated maternal absence, the pups, surprisingly, stayed alert and displayed a rapid response to an acute stressor. We then investigated whether pup__s stress responsiveness was influenced by the context of maternal separation. It appeared that the experience of being kept in isolation in a novel environment during repeated maternal separation, rather than the maternal absence per se, caused priming of the amygdala fear pathway, with lasting consequences for the responsiveness of the neuroendocrine and behavioral stress system. These endocrine and behavioral alterations, caused by early-life stress experience, consisted of schizophrenia-like phenotypes. Second, we sought to investigate the interplay of such early-life stress experience with schizophrenia genetic predisposition and/or later-life social stress experience. Thus, we were able to test the three-hit (cumulative stress) and the developmental mismatch hypotheses. The former states that exposure to earlylife adversity and later-life psychosocial stressors, superimposed on genetic susceptibility, result in a severe schizophrenia-like phenotype. The latter proposes that experiences early-in-life program the developing brain in preparation for the future. In the case of genetically-predisposed apomorphine susceptible rats (schizophrenia-susceptible), we provide strong evidence for the three-hit hypothesis. In the case of the nongenetically selected Wistar rats, the mismatch hypothesis is supported since the outcome of early-life stress often negatively interacted with the pre-puberty social context. In agreement with the three-hit hypothesis of schizophrenia, we conclude from the current experiments that early-life stress experience in interaction with highly reactive dopaminergic alleles, leads to amygdala priming that, together with additional stressors, precipitate schizophrenia. Show less
Not everyone who experiments with cocaine acquires compulsive drug use. The mechanism underlying this individual difference in susceptibility to addiction is poorly understood. Recent studies have... Show moreNot everyone who experiments with cocaine acquires compulsive drug use. The mechanism underlying this individual difference in susceptibility to addiction is poorly understood. Recent studies have identified genes and adverse life events (stress) as risk factors. The objective of this thesis is to investigate the contribution of the adrenal stress hormones glucocorticoids and epinephrine to the psychostimulant effects of cocaine in the inbred DBA/2 and C57BL/6 mouse strains. Behavioural sensitisation, measured as an enhanced locomotor response to repeated cocaine exposure, was used as a model for the long-term neural adaptations underlying aspects of drug addiction. The results demonstrate that adrenal hormones play a critical role in cocaine sensitivity, which depends on genetic background because surgical removal of the adrenals (__adrenalectomy__) prevented cocaine sensitisation in DBA/2, but not C57BL/6 mice. The impact of genetic background was further emphasised by strain-specific changes in the midbrain dopamine system that mediates the rewarding effects of drugs. The effects of adrenalectomy could only be fully reversed by co-administration of glucocorticoids and epinephrine. These findings show that, depending on genetic background, adrenal stress hormones are important risk factors for vulnerability to cocaine, suggesting that pharmacological intervention in stress hormone action has therapeutic potential in drug addiction. Show less