AI Article Synopsis

  • Adolescence is marked by significant behavioral and physiological changes, leading to increased stress vulnerability, a pattern observed in rodent studies comparing adolescent and adult responses to stress.
  • The study used juvenile and adult male and female rats to assess how they reacted to footshock stress, measuring hormone levels and cytokine expression in various brain regions important for stress response.
  • Results showed that adolescent rats had blunted immune responses compared to adults, particularly with the IL-1 signaling system, indicating developmental differences in stress response mechanisms based on age and sex.

Article Abstract

Adolescence is a developmental period characterized by rapid behavioral and physiological changes, including enhanced vulnerability to stress. Recent studies using rodent models of adolescence have demonstrated age differences in neuroendocrine responses and blunted neuroimmune responding to pharmacological challenges. The present study was designed to test whether this neuroimmune insensitivity would generalize to a non-pharmacological stress challenge. Male and female adolescent (P29-33) and adult (P70-80) Sprague Dawley rats were exposed to intermittent footshock for one-, two-, or two-hours + recovery. Plasma corticosterone and progesterone levels as well as gene expression of several cytokines and c-Fos gene expression in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVN), the medial amygdala (MeA), and the ventral hippocampus (vHPC) were analyzed. The results of the present study demonstrated differences in response to footshock, with these differences dependent on age, sex, and brain region of interest. Adult males and females demonstrated time-dependent increases in IL-1β and IL-1R2 in the PVN, with these changes not evident in adolescent males and substantially blunted in adolescent females. TNFα expression was decreased in all regions of interest, with adults demonstrating more suppression relative to adolescents and age differences more apparent in males than in females. IL-6 expression was affected by footshock predominantly in the vHPC of adolescent and adult males and females, with females demonstrating prolonged elevation of IL-6 gene expression. In summary, central cytokine responses to acute stressor exposure are blunted in adolescent rats, with the most pronounced immaturity evident for the brain IL-1 signaling system.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8287786PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ejn.15118DOI Listing

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