4.5 Article

β-endorphin degradation and the individual reactivity to traumatic stress

Journal

EUROPEAN NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 12, Pages 1779-1788

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.euroneuro.2012.12.003

Keywords

beta-endorphin; Acute traumatic stress; Insulin; LC-MS/MS; Opioid degrading enzymes; Anxiety; Rat

Funding

  1. Research Grant of the Chief Scientist Office of the Ministry of Health, Israel [3000003141]
  2. Lady Davis's fellowship trust
  3. National Institute for Psychobiology in Israel

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Reactivity to traumatic stress varies between individuals and only a minority of those exposed to trauma develops stress-induced psychopathologies. Currently extensive effort is made to unravel the specific mechanisms predisposing to vulnerability vs. resilience to stress. We investigated in rats the role of beta-endorphin metabolism in vulnerability to acute traumatic stress. Responders (showing extreme anxiety; n=7) and resilient non-responders (not differing from the non-stressed individuals; n=8) to traumatic foot-shock stress were compared for their blood levels of stress hormones as well as brain levels and activity of two opioid-degrading enzymes. beta-endorphin is a substrate to insulin degrading enzyme, which also degrades insulin. Therefore, the effects of insulin application on behavioral and hormonal responses and on beta-endorphin degradation were tested. Pre- and post-stress levels of serum corticosterone, and post-stress plasma beta-endorphin concentration differentiated between the responders and the non-responders. In brain, responders showed enhanced degradation rates of beta-endorphin, assessed by Liquid Chromatography-Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), in hippocampal and amygdalar slices as compared to non-responders. Application of insulin to the amygdala, prior to exposure to traumatic stress, reduced post-stress anxiety and serum corticosterone levels only in the responders. In parallel, amygdalar beta-endorphin degradation rate was also reduced by insulin. These results suggest that slowing down beta-endorphin degradation rate may constitute an integral part of the normal stress-response, upon a failure of which an extreme anxiety develops. Modulation of opioid degradation may thus present a potential novel target for interference with extreme anxiety. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. and ECNP. All rights reserved.

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