Stress relief as a natural resilience mechanism against depression-like behaviors.

Neuron

Department of Psychiatry and International Institutes of Medicine, The Fourth Affiliated Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Yiwu 322000, China; Liangzhu Laboratory, MOE Frontier Science Center for Brain Science and Brain-Machine Integration, State Key Laboratory of Brain-Machine Intelligence, New Cornerstone Science Laboratory, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 311121, China. Electronic address:

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Relief, the feeling of ease after stress, is an important evolutionary trait that can affect our behavior and mental health.
  • Research shows that how much relief one feels after physical stress is linked to their ability to avoid depression, especially in mice that are chronically stressed.
  • The study highlights that boosting relief with natural rewards can enhance resilience against depression, offering potential strategies for improving mental health.

Article Abstract

Relief, the appetitive state after the termination of aversive stimuli, is evolutionarily conserved. Understanding the behavioral role of this well-conserved phenomenon and its underlying neurobiological mechanisms are open and important questions. Here, we discover that the magnitude of relief from physical stress strongly correlates with individual resilience to depression-like behaviors in chronic stressed mice. Notably, blocking stress relief causes vulnerability to depression-like behaviors, whereas natural rewards supplied shortly after stress promotes resilience. Stress relief is mediated by reward-related mesolimbic dopamine neurons, which show minute-long, persistent activation after stress termination. Circuitry-wise, activation or inhibition of circuits downstream of the ventral tegmental area during the transient relief period bi-directionally regulates depression resilience. These results reveal an evolutionary function of stress relief in depression resilience and identify the neural substrate mediating this effect. Importantly, our data suggest a behavioral strategy of augmenting positive valence of stress relief with natural rewards to prevent depression.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2023.09.004DOI Listing

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