Abstract

Childhood trauma and neglect influence emotional development and increase the risk for and severity of mental illness. Women have a heightened susceptibility to the effects of early life stress (ELS) and are twice as likely as men to develop debilitating, stress-associated disorders later in life, such as major depressive disorder (MDD). Until now, mouse models of depression have been largely unsuccessful at replicating the diverse symptomatology of this disease and the sex bias in vulnerability. From P4 to P11, a limited bedding model that leads to fragmented maternal care, was used to induce ELS. Early adolescent and young adult mice were tested on an array of assays to test for depressive-like behavior. This included our newly developed automated home cage behavioral recognition system, where the home cage behavior of ELS and control mice could be monitored over a continuous 5–10 day span. ELS females, but not males, exhibited depressive-like behaviors on traditional assays. These effects emerged during adolescence and became more severe in adulthood. Using the novel home cage video monitoring method, we identified robust and continuous markers of depressive-like pathology in ELS females that phenocopy many of the behavioral characteristics of depression in humans. ELS effects on home cage behavior were rapidly rescued by ketamine, a fast-acting antidepressant. Together, these findings highlight that limited bedding ELS (1) produces an early emerging, female-specific depressive phenotype that responds to a fast-acting antidepressant and (2) this model has the potential to inform sex-selective risk for the development of stress-induced mental illness.

Highlights

  • Life stress (ELS) has life-long consequences on neural and behavioral development and is associated with a significant increase in the risk for mental illness, including anxiety and depression [1, 2]

  • To test if Early life stress (ELS) contributes to the development depressive-like behaviors, mice were tested on the sucrose preference test, forced swimming test, and novelty-induced hypophagia (NIH) test

  • A trend toward decreased sucrose preference was found in ELS females compared with ELS males (t(18) = 2.176, p = 0.050)

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Summary

Introduction

Life stress (ELS) has life-long consequences on neural and behavioral development and is associated with a significant increase in the risk for mental illness, including anxiety and depression [1, 2]. Females are at increased risk for developing stress-associated pathology with a female/male risk ratio of ~2:1 [3,4,5]. Despite the significant sex disparities in stressassociated pathology, the mechanisms supporting female susceptibility are largely unknown. Animal models represent a fertile testing ground to probe potential mechanisms underlying risk and mental illness in humans [9, 10], but few studies have tested females in ELS models, and even fewer recapitulate the sex bias in risk for negative outcomes

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