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Sex-specific fear acquisition following early life stress is linked to amygdala glutamate metabolism

Bordes, J.; Bajaj, T.; Miranda, L.; van Doeselaar, L.; Brix, L. M.; Narayan, S.; Yang, H.; Mitra, S.; Kovarova, V.; Springer, M.; Kleigrewe, K.; Mueller-Myhsok, B.; Gassen, N. C.; Schmidt, M. V.

2024-02-17 animal behavior and cognition
10.1101/2024.02.15.580479 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Early life stress (ELS) adversely affects physiological and behavioral outcomes, increasing the vulnerability to stress-related disorders, such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). PTSD prevalence is significantly higher in women and is partially mediated by genetic risk variants. Understanding how sex influences the interaction of PTSD risk genes, such as FKBP5, with trauma-related behaviors is crucial for uncovering PTSDs neurobiological pathways. The development of in-depth behavioral analysis tools using unsupervised behavioral classification is thereby a crucial tool to increase the understanding of the behavioral outcomes related to stress-induced fear memory formation. The current study investigates the sex-specific effects of ELS exposure by using the limited bedding and nesting (LBN) paradigm. The LBN exposure disrupted different facets of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis in a sex-specific manner directly after stress and at adult age. Moreover, freezing was altered by LBN exposure in both the acquisition and the retrieval of fear in a sex-dependent manner. Unsupervised behavioral analysis revealed a higher active fear response after LBN exposure during fear acquisition in females, but not in males. The regulation of the HPA axis is closely intertwined with cellular metabolism and core regulatory cascades. To investigate the impact of LBN exposure on tissue-specific metabolism, a metabolomic pathway analysis in the basolateral amygdala revealed a specific sex- and stress-dependent effect on purine, pyrimidine, and glutamate metabolism. The present study highlights the intricate interplay between metabolic pathways and the neurobiological substrates implicated in fear memory formation and stress regulation. Overall, these findings highlight the importance of considering sex-specific metabolic alterations in understanding the neurobiological mechanisms underlying stress-related disorders and offer potential avenues for targeted interventions.

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