4.5 Article

Chemogenetic manipulation of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis counteracts social behavioral deficits induced by early life stress in C57BL/6J mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH
Volume 99, Issue 1, Pages 90-109

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jnr.24644

Keywords

BNST; extended amygdala; maternal separation; postnatal stress; RRID; AB_2535812; RRID; Addgene_50475; RRID; Addgene_50476; social interaction

Categories

Funding

  1. Santa Clara University: University Research Grant
  2. Collaborative for Teaching Innovation University Teaching Grant

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Trauma during critical periods of development can lead to long-lasting adverse effects, including behavioral deficits related to anxiety and social behavior. Studies using rodent maternal separation have shown that manipulation of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) may have different effects on social behavior in non-stressed versus early life stress (ELS) mice, suggesting BNST as a potential therapeutic target for social anxiety disorders stemming from childhood trauma.
Trauma during critical periods of development can induce long-lasting adverse effects. To study neural aberrations resulting from early life stress (ELS), many studies utilize rodent maternal separation, whereby pups are intermittently deprived of maternal care necessary for proper development. This can produce adulthood behavioral deficits related to anxiety, reward, and social behavior. The bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) encodes aspects of anxiety-like and social behaviors, and also undergoes developmental maturation during the early postnatal period, rendering it vulnerable to effects of ELS. Mice underwent maternal separation (separation 4 hr/day during postnatal day (PD)2-5 and 8 hr/day on PD6-16) with early weaning on PD17, which induced behavioral deficits in adulthood performance on two-part social interaction task designed to test social motivation (choice between a same-sex novel conspecific or an empty cup) and social novelty preference (choice between the original-novel conspecific vs. a new-novel conspecific). We used chemogenetics to non-selectively silence or activate neurons in the BNST to examine its role in social motivation and social novelty preference, in mice with or without the history of ELS. Manipulation of BNST produced differing social behavior effects in non-stressed versus ELS mice; social motivation was decreased in non-stressed mice following BNST activation, but unchanged following BNST silencing, while ELS mice showed no change in social behavior after BNST activation, but exhibited enhancement of social motivation-for which they were deficient prior-following BNST silencing. Findings emphasize the BNST as a potential therapeutic target for social anxiety disorders instigated by childhood trauma.

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