Reward-Related Brain Activation, Resting-State Functional Connectivity, and White Matter Morphology Link Early Life Stress and Internalizing Symptoms in Adolescence

2021 ◽  
Vol 89 (9) ◽  
pp. S28
Author(s):  
Rajpreet Chahal ◽  
Lauren Borchers ◽  
Jaclyn Kirshenbaum ◽  
Joshua Ryua
2013 ◽  
Vol 214 (3) ◽  
pp. 247-253 ◽  
Author(s):  
Noah S. Philip ◽  
Yuliya I. Kuras ◽  
Thomas R. Valentine ◽  
Lawrence H. Sweet ◽  
Audrey R. Tyrka ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer A. Honeycutt ◽  
Camila Demaestri ◽  
Shayna Peterzell ◽  
Marisa M. Silveri ◽  
Xuezhu Cai ◽  
...  

AbstractAdverse early experiences significantly alter behavioral and neural trajectories via aberrant brain maturation. Children with a history of early life stress (ELS) exhibit maladaptive behaviors and increased risk of mental illness later in life. Evidence in ELS-exposed humans identifies a role of atypical corticolimbic development; specifically, within amygdala-prefrontal cortex (PFC) circuits, and show precocially mature task-based corticolimbic functional connectivity (FC). However, the neurobiological substrates of such ELS-driven developmental changes remain unknown. Here, we identify putative neurobiological changes to determine the timeline of developmental perturbations following ELS in rats. Anterograde axonal tracing from basolateral amygdala (BLA) to pre- and infralimbic (PL, IL) PFC was quantified at postnatal days (PD)28, 38, and 48, along with anxiety-like behavior, in maternally separated (ELS) or control reared (CON) male and female rats. Resting state (rs)FC was assessed at PD28 and PD48 in a separate cohort. We report that ELS-exposed female rats show early maturation of BLA-PFC innervation at PD28, with ELS-related changes in males not appearing until PD38. ELS disrupted the maturation of rsFC from PD28 to PD48 in females, with enduring relationships between early rsFC and later anxiety-like behavior. Only transient ELS-related changes in rsFC were seen in male PL. Together, these data provide evidence that female rats may be more vulnerable to the effects of ELS via precocial BLA-PFC innervation, which may drive altered corticolimbic rsFC. These data also provide evidence that increased BLA-IL rsFC is associated with behavioral resiliency following ELS in female rats, providing mechanistic insight into the underlying etiology of adversity-induced vulnerability and resiliency.


2021 ◽  
pp. 216770262110164
Author(s):  
Pan Liu ◽  
Matthew R. J. Vandermeer ◽  
Ola Mohamed Ali ◽  
Andrew R. Daoust ◽  
Marc F. Joanisse ◽  
...  

Understanding the development of depression can inform etiology and prevention/intervention. Maternal depression and maladaptive patterns of temperament (e.g., low positive emotionality [PE] or high negative emotionality, especially sadness) are known to predict depression. Although it is unclear how these risks cause depression, altered functional connectivity (FC) during negative-emotion processing may play an important role. We investigated whether maternal depression and age-3 emotionality predicted FC during negative mood reactivity in never-depressed preadolescents and whether these relationships were augmented by early-life stress. Maternal depression predicted decreased medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC)–amygdala and mPFC–insula FC but increased mPFC–posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) FC. PE predicted increased dorsolateral prefrontal cortex–amygdala FC, whereas sadness predicted increased PCC-based FC in insula, orbitofrontal cortex, and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC). Sadness was more strongly associated with PCC–insula and PCC–ACC FC as early stress increased. Findings indicate that early depression risks may be mediated by FC underlying negative-emotion processing.


Author(s):  
Nicholas M. Morelli ◽  
Michael T. Liuzzi ◽  
Jacqueline B. Duong ◽  
Emma Chad-Friedman ◽  
Miguel T. Villodas ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 35 (10) ◽  
pp. 5328-5339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Fan ◽  
Ana Lucia Herrera-Melendez ◽  
Karin Pestke ◽  
Melanie Feeser ◽  
Sabine Aust ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document