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β-Adrenergic Receptor Antagonism Prevents Anxiety-Like Behavior and Microglial Reactivity Induced by Repeated Social Defeat

Contact Information

Keywords

John F. Sheridan, sheridan.1@osu.edu

N/A

Abstract

Psychosocial stress is associated with altered immune function and development of psychological disorders including anxiety and depression. Here we show that repeated social defeat in mice increased c-Fos staining in brain regions associated with fear and threat appraisal and promoted anxiety-like behavior in a β-adrenergic receptor-dependent manner. Repeated social defeat also significantly increased the number of CD11b+/CD45high/Ly6Chigh macrophages that trafficked to the brain. In addition, several inflammatory markers were increased on the surface of microglia (CD14, CD86, and TLR4) and macrophages (CD14 and CD86) after social defeat. Repeated social defeat also increased the presence of deramified microglia in the medial amygdala, prefrontal cortex, and hippocampus. Moreover, mRNA analysis of microglia indicated that repeated social defeat increased levels of interleukin (IL)-1β and reduced levels of glucocorticoid responsive genes [glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper (GILZ) and FK506 binding protein-51 (FKBP51)]. The stress-dependent changes in microglia and macrophages were prevented by propranolol, a β-adrenergic receptor antagonist. Microglia isolated from socially defeated mice and cultured ex vivo produced markedly higher levels of IL-6, tumor necrosis factor-α, and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 after stimulation with lipopolysaccharide compared with microglia from control mice. Last, repeated social defeat increased c-Fos activation in IL-1 receptor type-1-deficient mice, but did not promote anxiety-like behavior or microglia activation in the absence of functional IL-1 receptor type-1. These findings indicate that repeated social defeat-induced anxiety-like behavior and enhanced reactivity of microglia was dependent on activation of β-adrenergic and IL-1 receptors.

Citation

Wohleb, E. S., Hanke, M. L., Corona, A. W., Powell, N. D., Stiner, L. M., Bailey, M. T., Nelson, R. J., Godbout, J. P., & Sheridan, J. F. (2011). β-Adrenergic receptor antagonism prevents anxiety-like behavior and microglial reactivity induced by repeated social defeat. The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience, 31(17), 6277–6288. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0450-11.2011

DOI

10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0450-11.2011

EWB Constructs:

homeostasis

EWB Measures:

social disruption stress

data availability:

No

data availability details:

N/A

brain imaging paradigm:

medial amygdala, prefrontal conrtex, hippocampus

brain region/circuit:

Exclusion Criteria:

N/A

Inclusion Criteria

N/A

Non-EWB Behavioral
Measures:

N/A

First author:

Eric S Wohleb

species:

mouse

sample size:

45-74

study design:

case control

longitudinal data?

No

younger controls?

N/A

interventions:

Treated mice exposed to social defeat stress with a beta-adrenergic receptor antagonist and examined influence on microglia

study population:

N/A

sex (% female):

0%

ethnicity (%white)

N/A

Age (mean, sd):

6-8 weeks

biological/Physiological Measures:

(2) inflammation

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