4.4 Article

Estradiol withdrawal following a hormone simulated pregnancy induces deficits in affective behaviors and increases AFosB in D1 and D2 neurons in the nucleus accumbens core in mice

Journal

HORMONES AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 149, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2023.105312

Keywords

Estradiol; Neuroplasticity; Anxiety; Motivation; Postpartum; Dopamine

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In placental mammals, elevated levels of estradiol during pregnancy decrease rapidly after birth, potentially leading to an estrogen withdrawal state that affects affective states in the postpartum period. The neural mechanisms underlying these affective changes are not well studied.
In placental mammals, estradiol levels are chronically elevated during pregnancy, but quickly drop to prepartum levels following birth. This may produce an estrogen withdrawal state that has been linked to changes in af-fective states in humans and rodents during the postpartum period. The neural mechanisms underlying these affective changes, however, are understudied. We used a hormone-simulated pseudopregnancy (HSP), a model of postpartum estrogen withdrawal, in adult female C57BL/6 mice to test the impact of postpartum estradiol withdrawal on several behavioral measures of anxiety and motivation. We found that estradiol withdrawal following HSP increased anxiety-like behavior in the elevated plus maze, but not in the open field or marble burying tests. Although hormone treatment during HSP consistently increased sucrose consumption, sucrose preference was generally not impacted by hormone treatment or subsequent estradiol withdrawal. In the social motivation test, estradiol withdrawal decreased the amount of time spent in proximity to a social stimulus an-imal. These behavioral changes were accompanied by changes in the expression of AFosB, a transcription factor correlated with stable long-term plasticity, in the nucleus accumbens (NAc). Specifically, estrogen-withdrawn females had higher AFosB expression in the nucleus accumbens core, but AFosB expression did not vary across hormone conditions in the nucleus accumbens shell. Using transgenic reporter mice, we found that this increase in AFosB occurred in both D1-and D2-expressing cells in the NAc core. Together, these results suggest that postpartum estrogen withdrawal impacts anxiety and motivation and increases AFosB in the NAc core.

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