4.7 Article

Fluoxetine treatment supports predictive validity of the three hit model of depression in male PACAP heterozygous mice and underpins the impact of early life adversity on therapeutic efficacy

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2022.995900

Keywords

central amygdala; bed nucleus of stria terminalis; centrally projecting Edinger-Westphal nucleus; ventral tegmental area; dorsal raphe nucleus

Funding

  1. National Research, Development and Innovation Fund of Hungary [TKP2021- EGA-16, TKP2021-EGA, 2020-4.1.1-TKP2020, TKP2020IKA-08]
  2. Hungarian Scientific Research Fund (NKFIH) [PD100706, FK124188]
  3. Medical Faculty, University of Pecs [KA-2019-12]
  4. National Research, Development and Innovation Fund [UNKP-22-5-PTE-1740]
  5. Janos Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences [BO/ 00750/22/5]
  6. Pecs University Medical School [KA-2020-03]
  7. New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology from the source of the National Research, Development and Innovation Fund [UNKP-20-4-II-PTE-547]
  8. NAP [2017-1.2.1-NKP-2017-00002, MTA-TKI14016]

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According to the three hit concept of depression, the interaction of genetic predisposition, altered epigenetic programming, and environmental stress factors contribute to the disease. In this study, fluoxetine treatment was found to reduce anxiety and depression levels in mice, and to cause functional and morphological changes in certain brain regions. These findings provide further support for the validity of the three hit concept and the animal model.
According to the three hit concept of depression, interaction of genetic predisposition altered epigenetic programming and environmental stress factors contribute to the disease. Earlier we demonstrated the construct and face validity of our three hit concept-based mouse model. In the present work, we aimed to examine the predictive validity of our model, the third willnerian criterion. Fluoxetine treatment was applied in chronic variable mild stress (CVMS)-exposed (environmental hit) CD1 mice carrying one mutated allele of pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide gene (genetic hit) that were previously exposed to maternal deprivation (epigenetic hit) vs. controls. Fluoxetine reduced the anxiety level in CVMS-exposed mice in marble burying test, and decreased the depression level in tail suspension test if mice were not deprived maternally. History of maternal deprivation caused fundamental functional-morphological changes in response to CVMS and fluoxetine treatment in the corticotropin-releasing hormone-producing cells of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis and central amygdala, in tyrosine-hydroxylase content of ventral tegmental area, in urocortin 1-expressing cells of the centrally projecting Edinger-Westphal nucleus, and serotonergic cells of the dorsal raphe nucleus. The epigenetic background of alterations was approved by altered acetylation of histone H3. Our findings further support the validity of both the three hit concept and that of our animal model. Reversal of behavioral and functional-morphological anomalies by fluoxetine treatment supports the predictive validity of the model. This study highlights that early life stress does not only interact with the genetic and environmental factors, but has strong influence also on therapeutic efficacy.

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