INVESTIGADORES
REFOJO Damian
artículos
Título:
Conditional mouse mutants highlight mechanisms of corticotropin-releasing hormone effects on stress-coping behavior.
Autor/es:
LU A, ; STEINER MA, ; WHITTLE N, ; VOGL AM, ; WALSER SM, ; ABLEITNER M, ; REFOJO D,; EKKER M, ; RUBENSTEIN JL, `; STALLA GK, ; SINGEWALD N, ; HOLSBOER F, ; WOTJAK CT, ; WURST W, ; DEUSSING JM.
Revista:
MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
Editorial:
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
Referencias:
Lugar: Londres; Año: 2008 vol. 13 p. 1028 - 1042
ISSN:
1359-4184
Resumen:
Hypersecretion of central corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) has been
implicated in the pathophysiology of affective disorders. Both, basic
and clinical studies suggested that disrupting CRH signaling through CRH
type 1 receptors (CRH-R1) can ameliorate stress-related clinical
conditions. To study the effects of CRH-R1 blockade upon CRH-elicited
behavioral and neurochemical changes we created different mouse lines
overexpressing CRH in distinct spatially restricted patterns. CRH
overexpression in the entire central nervous system, but not when
overexpressed in specific forebrain regions, resulted in stress-induced
hypersecretion of stress hormones and increased active stress-coping
behavior reflected by reduced immobility in the forced swim test and
tail suspension test. These changes were related to acute effects of
overexpressed CRH as they were normalized by CRH-R1 antagonist treatment
and recapitulated the effect of stress-induced activation of the
endogenous CRH system. Moreover, we identified enhanced noradrenergic
activity as potential molecular mechanism underlying increased active
stress-coping behavior observed in these animals. Thus, these transgenic
mouse lines may serve as animal models for stress-elicited pathologies
and treatments that target the central CRH system.

