AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates how repeated social defeat (RSD) stress in mice affects the brain's immune response, especially focusing on the role of microglia and their impact on anxiety and depression.
  • - Results showed that microglia retain altered activity long after RSD, and their elimination prevented monocyte accumulation and anxiety recurrence when exposed to acute stress.
  • - However, microglial elimination did not affect neuronal sensitization, indicating that neurons also remain sensitized after RSD, which contributes to prolonged immune reactions and sickness behavior.

Article Abstract

Background: Stress is associated with an increased prevalence of anxiety and depression. Repeated social defeat (RSD) stress in mice increases the release of monocytes from the bone marrow that are recruited to the brain by microglia. These monocytes enhance inflammatory signaling and augment anxiety. Moreover, RSD promotes stress sensitization, in which exposure to acute stress 24 days after cessation of RSD causes anxiety recurrence. The purpose of this study was to determine whether microglia were critical to stress sensitization and exhibited increased reactivity to subsequent acute stress or immune challenge.

Methods: Mice were exposed to RSD, microglia were eliminated by colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor antagonism (PLX5622) and allowed to repopulate, and responses to acute stress or immune challenge (lipopolysaccharide) were determined 24 days after RSD sensitization.

Results: Microglia maintained a unique messenger RNA signature 24 days after RSD. Moreover, elimination of RSD-sensitized microglia prevented monocyte accumulation in the brain and blocked anxiety recurrence following acute stress (24 days). When microglia were eliminated prior to RSD and repopulated and mice were subjected to acute stress, there was monocyte accumulation in the brain and anxiety in RSD-sensitized mice. These responses were unaffected by microglial elimination/repopulation. This may be related to neuronal sensitization that persisted 24 days after RSD. Following immune challenge, there was robust microglial reactivity in RSD-sensitized mice associated with prolonged sickness behavior. Here, microglial elimination/repopulation prevented the amplified immune reactivity ex vivo and in vivo in RSD-sensitized mice.

Conclusions: Microglia and neurons remain sensitized weeks after RSD, and only the immune reactivity component of RSD-sensitized microglia was prevented by elimination/repopulation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6440809PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2018.10.009DOI Listing

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