Abstract

Chronic stress induces neurobiological alterations which have consequences for subsequent stress handling. In the current experiment, ovariectomized rats were subjected daily to a stressor for 21 days. Thereafter, the rats were treated for 21 days with 17beta-estradiol benzoate (10 microg/250 g, once every 4 days) or mirtazapine (10 mg/kg, daily). In this way, we were able to evaluate the ability of these compounds to reverse chronic stress-induced changes in the activity of the limbic system. After 21 days of recovery and treatment, the rats were re-exposed to the adverse environment of the initial stressor and perfused 2 h later. Ovariectomized rats displayed increased numbers of c-Fos-positive nuclei, after re-exposure to the stressor, in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus, dentate gyrus, medial prefrontal cortex and central and medial amygdala. Cyclic estradiol treatment attenuated the sensitization of the paraventricular nucleus and central amygdala. Mirtazapine increased the number of c-Fos-positive nuclei in the central amygdala and dentate gyrus. Long-term transcriptional changes induced by chronic stress were determined with DeltaFosB immunoreactivity. The medial prefrontal cortex showed an increased number of DeltaFosB-positive nuclei after chronic stress and this was not affected by estradiol or mirtazapine administration during recovery. In conclusion, cyclic estradiol administration reversed chronic stress-induced sensitization in the limbic system, the paraventricular nucleus and central amygdala of female rats, output regions of the limbic system involved in fear responses. Mirtazapine did not achieve this reversal of stress-induced aberrations in the limbic system after 21 days of treatment.

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