Female-specific role of ciliary neurotrophic factor in the medial amygdala in promoting stress responses

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ynstr.2022.100435Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • CNTF in the MeA promotes despair or passive coping behavior in female mice only.

  • Chronic stress upregulates CNTF in female but not male MeA.

  • CNTF contributes to chronic stress-induced despair or passive coping, anhedonia and neuroendocrine responses in females only.

  • CNTF does not affect anxiety-like behavior and sensorimotor gating function.

  • These data reveal a novel CNTF-mediated female-specific mechanism in stress responses.

Abstract

Ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) is produced by astrocytes which have been implicated in regulating stress responses. We found that CNTF in the medial amygdala (MeA) promotes despair or passive coping, i.e., immobility in an acute forced swim stress, in female mice, while having no effect in males. Neutralizing CNTF antibody injected into the MeA of wildtype females reduced activation of downstream STAT3 (Y705) 24 and 48 h later. In concert, the antibody reduced immobility in the swim test in females and only after MeA injection, but not when injected in the central or basolateral amygdala. Antibody injected into the male MeA did not affect immobility. These data reveal a unique role of CNTF in female MeA in promoting despair or passive coping behavior. Moreover, 4 weeks of chronic unpredictable stress (CUS) increased immobility in the swim test and reduced sucrose preference in wildtype CNTF+/+, but not CNTF−/− littermate, females. Following CUS, 10 min of restraint stress increased plasma corticosterone levels only in CNTF+/+ females. In males, the CUS effects were present in both genotypes. Further, CUS increased CNTF expression in the MeA of female, but not male, mice. CUS did not alter CNTF in the female hippocampus, hypothalamus and bed nucleus of stria terminalis. This suggests that MeA CNTF has a female-specific role in promoting CUS-induced despair or passive coping, behavioral anhedonia and neuroendocrine responses. Compared to CNTF+/+ mice, CNTF−/− mice did not show differences in CUS-induced anxiety-like behavior and sensorimotor gating function as measured by elevated T-Maze, open field and pre-pulse inhibition of the acoustic startle response. Together, this study reveals a novel CNTF-mediated female-specific mechanism in stress responses and points to opportunities for developing treatments for stress-related disorders in women.

Keywords

Chronic unpredictable stress
Passive stress-coping
Anhedonia
Neuroendocrine response
Neutralizing antibody
Stereotaxic injection

Abbreviations

BLA
basolateral amygdala
BNST
bed nucleus of stria terminalis
CeA
central amygdala
CNTF
ciliary neurotrophic factor
CRF
corticotropin releasing factor
CUS
chronic unpredictable stress
HPA
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal
Hyp
hypothalamus
IL-6
interleukin-6
LIF
leukemia inhibitory factor
MeA
medial amygdala
mPFC
medial prefrontal cortex
PAG
periaqueductal grey
PTSD
post-traumatic stress disorder
PVN
paraventricular nucleus
TNF
tumor necrosis factor

Data availability

Data will be made available on request.

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1

These authors contributed equally.