Abstract

The study of the mechanisms underlying the increased vulnerability of the individual to stressful environmental factors in different age periods is of great relevance for prevention and effective treatment of stress-dependent diseases that are widespread in the population of aging individuals. The purpose of our study was to investigate the individual and age-related features of the glucocorticoid negative feedback in regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, the key adaptive neuroendocrine system, in experiments with physically healthy young and old female rhesus monkeys with administration of mineracorticoid receptor (fludrocortisone) and glucocorticoid receptor (dexamethasone) agonists. We studied the monkeys with increased trait anxiety and depression-like behavior (DAB) characterized, as previously was shown, by the increased vulnerability to acute stress and the animals with normal standard behavior (SB) as the control. The pronounced individual differences in the reaction of HPA axis to fludrocortisone and dexamethasone in young animals were found. Young animals with DAB showed a lower sensitivity of HPA axis to the inhibitory effect of both fludrocortisone and dexamethasone compared with young animals with SB. At the same time, there were no significant intergroup differences in the concentration of ACTH and cortisol in response to placebo injection, i.e., in basal conditions. The old individuals with DAB demonstrated the essential relative resistance of HPA axis to fludrocortisone test and higher basal plasma levels of cortisol and ACTH in the evening (the period of HPA axis low circadian activity) compared to old SB animals. In the same time, the intergroup differences in the response of HPA axis to dexamethasone administration were leveled due to age-related increase in sensitivity of HPA axis to dexamethasone in animals with DAB. These data testify the pronounced intergroup and age differences in the feedback regulation of HPA axis, presumably resulting from unequal individual, and age-related changes in the activity of mineralcorticoid and glucocorticoid receptors in the brain structures supporting the functions of HPA axis. The maximum age disorders in functioning of the negative feedback mechanism in the regulation of HPA axis are characteristic of animals with DAB, which, apparently, underlie the increased vulnerability of these animals to stress exposure.

Highlights

  • Expansion of the stress factors range determines relevance of the problem of stress impact on human health

  • We studied glucocorticoid negative feedback in regulation of HPA axis on female rhesus monkeys using the test with fludrocortisone (FLUD, agonist MR) and after 4 weeks we investigated negative feedback in regulation of HPA axis on the same monkeys using the test with dexamethasone (DEX, agonist GR)

  • Young Animals The revealed inhibitory effect of FLUD on HPA axis activity in all young animals, regardless of their behavior, testify the important role of MR in self-regulation of HPA axis in young primates in the evening, there is a period of physiological circadian nadir of basal activity of HPA axis

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Summary

Introduction

Expansion of the stress factors range (terrorism, environmental ill-being, local wars, etc.) determines relevance of the problem of stress impact on human health. Old animals with depression-like and anxiety-like behavior were most vulnerable to negative aspects of acute stress exposure and showed the greatest disturbances in the functioning of the HPA axis accompanied by an increase in the concentration of biomarkers of aging [13, 14]. Significant differences in the functioning of the HPA axis were demonstrated by young mature animals with depression-like and anxietylike behavior [18,19,20] In these animals, an increased ACTH response to repeated stress exposure and to functional tests with arginine vasopressin (AVP) and corticotrophin releasing hormone (CRH) was revealed compared to young females with standard behavior [18,19,20]

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