4.6 Article

Early-life stress induces emotional and molecular alterations in female mice that are partially reversed by cannabidiol

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.pnpbp.2021.110508

Keywords

Cannabidiol; mTOR; ERK 1/2; Maternal separation; Early life stress; Cytochrome c oxidase

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad [PID2019-104077-RB-100, PSI201783038-P]
  2. Ministerio de Sanidad, Asuntos Sociales e Igualdad [ReticISCIII-RD/16/0017/0010-FEDER]
  3. Plan Nacional Sobre Drogas [2018/007]
  4. AEI [CEX2018-000792-M]

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Gender is considered a key determinant of mental health, with psychiatric disorders such as anxiety and depression more common in women. Impaired brain energy metabolism has been identified as a risk factor for the development of these disorders. However, comprehensive studies on the behavioral and neurobiological effects in this context are limited. This study explores the effects of cannabidiol on anxiety and depression in maternally separated female mice, finding that cannabidiol could alleviate these behaviors but not restore brain energy metabolism impairment.
Gender is considered as a pivotal determinant of mental health. Indeed, several psychiatric disorders such as anxiety and depression are more common and persistent in women than in men. In the past two decades, impaired brain energy metabolism has been highlighted as a risk factor for the development of these psychiatric disorders. However, comprehensive behavioural and neurobiological studies in brain regions relevant to anxiety and depression symptomatology are scarce. In the present study, we summarize findings describing cannabidiol effects on anxiety and depression in maternally separated female mice as a well-established rodent model of early-life stress associated with many mental disorders. Our results indicate that cannabidiol could prevent anxiolytic- and depressive-related behaviour in early-life stressed female mice. Additionally, maternal separation with early weaning (MSEW) caused long-term changes in brain oxidative metabolism in both nucleus accumbens and amygdalar complex measured by cytochrome c oxidase quantitative histochemistry. However, cannabidiol treatment could not revert brain oxidative metabolism impairment. Moreover, we identified hyperphosphorylation of mTOR and ERK 1/2 proteins in the amygdala but not in the striatum, that could also reflect altered brain intracellular signalling related with to bioenergetic impairment. Altogether, our study supports the hypothesis that MSEW induces profound long-lasting molecular changes in mTOR signalling and brain energy metabolism related to depressive-like and anxiety-like behaviours in female mice, which were partially ameliorated by CBD administration.

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