Age, sex, and gonadal hormones differently influence anxiety- and depression-related behavior during puberty in mice

被引:45
|
作者
Boivin, Josiah R. [1 ]
Piekarski, David J. [2 ]
Wahlberg, Jessica K. [2 ]
Wilbrecht, Linda [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] UC San Francisco, Neurosci Grad Program, 1550 4th St, San Francisco, CA 94158 USA
[2] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Psychol, 16 Barker Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
[3] Univ Calif Berkeley, Helen Wills Neurosci Inst, 16 Barker Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
关键词
Puberty; Anxiety; Depression; Gonadal hormones; Sex differences; Psychopathology; ESTROGEN-RECEPTOR-BETA; FEMALE RATS; CONTEXTUAL-AMPLIFICATION; GABA(A) RECEPTORS; OVARIAN HORMONES; ADOLESCENT GIRLS; STRESS-RESPONSE; TEENAGE BRAIN; PROGESTERONE; CYCLE;
D O I
10.1016/j.psyneuen.2017.08.009
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Anxiety and depression symptoms increase dramatically during adolescence, with girls showing a steeper increase than boys after puberty onset. The timing of the onset of this sex bias led us to hypothesize that ovarian hormones contribute to depression and anxiety during puberty. In humans, it is difficult to disentangle direct effects of gonadal hormones from social and environmental factors that interact with pubertal development to influence mental health. To test the role of gonadal hormones in anxiety- and depression-related behavior during puberty, we manipulated gonadal hormones in mice while controlling social and environmental factors. Similar to humans, we find that mice show an increase in depression-related behavior from pre-pubertal to late-pubertal ages, but this increase is not dependent on gonadal hormones and does not differ between sexes. Anxiety-related behavior, however, is more complex during puberty, with differences that depend on sex, age, behavioral test, and hormonal status. Briefly, males castrated before puberty show greater anxiety-related behavior during late puberty compared to intact males, while pubertal females are unaffected by ovariectomy or hormone injections in all assays except the marble burying test. Despite this sex-specific effect of pubertal hormones on anxiety related behavior, we find no sex differences in intact young adults, suggesting that males and females use separate mechanisms to converge on a similar behavioral phenotype. Our results are consistent with anxiolytic effects of testicular hormones during puberty in males but are not consistent with a causal role for ovarian hormones in increasing anxiety- and depression-related behavior during puberty in females.
引用
收藏
页码:78 / 87
页数:10
相关论文
共 34 条
  • [21] Enriched environments influence depression-related behavior in adult mice and the survival of newborn cells in their hippocampi
    Hattori, Satoko
    Hashimoto, Ryota
    Miyakawa, Tsuyoshi
    Yamanaka, Hajime
    Maeno, Hiroshi
    Wada, Keiji
    Kunugi, Hiroshi
    BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 2007, 180 (01) : 69 - 76
  • [22] Activation of GABA-A receptors during postnatal brain development increases anxiety- and depression-related behaviors in a time- and dose-dependent manner in adult mice
    Salari, Ali-Akbar
    Bakhtiari, Amir
    Homberg, Judith R.
    EUROPEAN NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 2015, 25 (08) : 1260 - 1274
  • [23] Reduced anxiety-like and depression-related behavior in neuropeptide YY4 receptor knockout mice
    Painsipp, E.
    Wultsch, T.
    Edelsbrunner, M. E.
    Tasan, R. O.
    Singewald, N.
    Herzog, H.
    Holzer, P.
    GENES BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR, 2008, 7 (05) : 532 - 542
  • [24] Tumor necrosis factor-alpha during neonatal brain development affects anxiety- and depression-related behaviors in adult male and female mice (vol 261, pg 305, 2014)
    Babri, Shirin
    Doosti, Mohammad-Hossein
    Salari, Ali-Akbar
    BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 2014, 270 : 372 - 372
  • [25] Voluntary physical activity increases maternal care and reduces anxiety-and depression-related behaviours during the postpartum period in mice
    Naghibi, Saeed
    Barzegari, Ali
    Shariatzadeh, Mohammad
    Vatandoust, Maryam
    Ahmadi, Mandana
    Mahdinia, Elham
    Neghabi, Fatemeh
    Rajabpour, Amir
    Aleahmad, Atikeh Sadat
    Balaghati, Forough Sadat
    Naserimanesh, Samira Sadat
    Saeedipour, Mina
    Sadeghi, Omid
    Yeganeh, Fatemeh
    Salari, Ali-Akbar
    BRAIN RESEARCH, 2022, 1784
  • [26] Anticonvulsant effect of pterostilbene and its influence on the anxiety- and depression-like behavior in the pentetrazol-kindled mice: behavioral, biochemical, and molecular studies
    Nieoczym, Dorota
    Socala, Katarzyna
    Zelek-Molik, Agnieszka
    Pierog, Mateusz
    Przejczowska-Pomierny, Katarzyna
    Szafarz, Malgorzata
    Wyska, Elzbieta
    Nalepa, Irena
    Wlaz, Piotr
    PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 2021, 238 (11) : 3167 - 3181
  • [27] Anticonvulsant effect of pterostilbene and its influence on the anxiety- and depression-like behavior in the pentetrazol-kindled mice: behavioral, biochemical, and molecular studies
    Dorota Nieoczym
    Katarzyna Socała
    Agnieszka Zelek-Molik
    Mateusz Pieróg
    Katarzyna Przejczowska-Pomierny
    Małgorzata Szafarz
    Elżbieta Wyska
    Irena Nalepa
    Piotr Wlaź
    Psychopharmacology, 2021, 238 : 3167 - 3181
  • [28] Fluoxetine normalizes disrupted light-induced entrainment, fragmented ultradian rhythms and altered hippocampal clock gene expression in an animal model of high trait anxiety- and depression-related behavior
    Schaufler, Joerg
    Ronovsky, Marianne
    Savalli, Giorgia
    Cabatic, Maureen
    Sartori, Simone B.
    Singewald, Nicolas
    Pollak, Daniela D.
    ANNALS OF MEDICINE, 2016, 48 (1-2) : 17 - 27
  • [29] Psychosocial Stress and Age Influence Depression and Anxiety-Related Behavior, Drive Tumor Inflammatory Cytokines and Accelerate Prostate Cancer Growth in Mice
    Bellinger, Denise L.
    Dulcich, Melissa S.
    Molinaro, Christine
    Gifford, Peter
    Lorton, Dianne
    Gridley, Daila S.
    Hartman, Richard E.
    FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY, 2021, 11
  • [30] Chronic corticosterone exposure causes anxiety- and depression-related behaviors with altered gut microbial and brain metabolomic profiles in adult male C57BL/6J mice
    Shoji, Hirotaka
    Maeda, Yasuhiro
    Miyakawa, Tsuyoshi
    MOLECULAR BRAIN, 2024, 17 (01)