학술논문

Regional gray matter oligodendrocyte- and myelin-related measures are associated with differential susceptibility to stress-induced behavior in rats and humans
Document Type
article
Source
Translational Psychiatry. 11(1)
Subject
Biological Psychology
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Psychology
Behavioral and Social Science
Brain Disorders
Mental Health
Neurosciences
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Anxiety Disorders
Autoimmune Disease
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Neurodegenerative
Neurological
Amygdala
Animals
Gray Matter
Hippocampus
Humans
Male
Myelin Basic Protein
Myelin Sheath
Oligodendroglia
Rats
Clinical Sciences
Public Health and Health Services
Clinical sciences
Biological psychology
Language
Abstract
Individual reactions to traumatic stress vary dramatically, yet the biological basis of this variation remains poorly understood. Recent studies demonstrate the surprising plasticity of oligodendrocytes and myelin with stress and experience, providing a potential mechanism by which trauma induces aberrant structural and functional changes in the adult brain. In this study, we utilized a translational approach to test the hypothesis that gray matter oligodendrocytes contribute to traumatic-stress-induced behavioral variation in both rats and humans. We exposed adult, male rats to a single, severe stressor and used a multimodal approach to characterize avoidance, startle, and fear-learning behavior, as well as oligodendrocyte and myelin basic protein (MBP) content in multiple brain areas. We found that oligodendrocyte cell density and MBP were correlated with behavioral outcomes in a region-specific manner. Specifically, stress-induced avoidance positively correlated with hippocampal dentate gyrus oligodendrocytes and MBP. Viral overexpression of the oligodendrogenic factor Olig1 in the dentate gyrus was sufficient to induce an anxiety-like behavioral phenotype. In contrast, contextual fear learning positively correlated with MBP in the amygdala and spatial-processing regions of the hippocampus. In a group of trauma-exposed US veterans, T1-/T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging estimates of hippocampal and amygdala myelin associated with symptom profiles in a region-specific manner that mirrored the findings in rats. These results demonstrate a species-independent relationship between region-specific, gray matter oligodendrocytes and differential behavioral phenotypes following traumatic stress exposure. This study suggests a novel mechanism for brain plasticity that underlies individual variance in sensitivity to traumatic stress.