Abstract

The synaptogenic hypothesis of major depressive disorder implies that preventing the onset of depressive-like behavior also prevents the loss of hippocampal spine synapses. By applying the psychoactive drugs, diazepam and fluoxetine, we investigated whether blocking the development of helpless behavior by promoting stress resilience in the rat learned helplessness paradigm is associated with a synaptoprotective action in the hippocampus. Adult ovariectomized and intact female Sprague-Dawley rats (n = 297) were treated with either diazepam, fluoxetine, or vehicle, exposed to inescapable footshocks or sham stress, and tested in an active escape task to assess helpless behavior. Escape-evoked corticosterone secretion, as well as remodeling of hippocampal spine synapses at a timepoint representing the onset of escape testing were also analyzed. In ovariectomized females, treatment with diazepam prior to stress exposure prevented helpless behavior, blocked the loss of hippocampal spine synapses, and muted the corticosterone surge evoked by escape testing. Although fluoxetine stimulated escape performance and hippocampal synaptogenesis under non-stressed conditions, almost all responses to fluoxetine were abolished following exposure to inescapable stress. Only a much higher dose of fluoxetine was capable of partly reproducing the strong protective actions of diazepam. Importantly, these protective actions were retained in the presence of ovarian hormones. Our findings indicate that stress resilience is associated with the preservation of spine synapses in the hippocampus, raising the possibility that, besides synaptogenesis, hippocampal synaptoprotection is also implicated in antidepressant therapy.

Highlights

  • As part of the limbic system, the hippocampus is heavily implicated in the neurobiology of major depression, its dysfunction contributing to many depressive symptoms, such as cognitive decline, loss of motivation, and stress system derailment (Sapolsky, 2000a; Sousa et al., 2000; Nestler et al, 2002; Lisman and Grace, 2005; Cooper et al, 2006; Diamond et al, 2006; LeGates et al, 2018)

  • By applying the psychoactive drugs, diazepam and fluoxetine, we investigated whether blocking the development of helpless behavior by promoting stress resilience in the rat learned helplessness paradigm is associated with a synaptoprotective action in the hippocampus

  • The excitatory, asymmetric spine synapses localized within the CA1 stratum radiatum (CA1sr), the CA3 stratum lucidum/radiatum (CA3sl/sr), and the dentate gyrus stratum moleculare (DGsm) are the prime linking points of the ‘‘trisynaptic loop”, the main neural circuit of the hippocampus, which is formed by sequentially organized pyramidal and granule cells (Amaral and Witter, 1995; Stepan et al, 2012, 2015)

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Summary

Introduction

As part of the limbic system, the hippocampus is heavily implicated in the neurobiology of major depression, its dysfunction contributing to many depressive symptoms, such as cognitive decline, loss of motivation, and stress system derailment (Sapolsky, 2000a; Sousa et al., 2000; Nestler et al, 2002; Lisman and Grace, 2005; Cooper et al, 2006; Diamond et al, 2006; LeGates et al, 2018). Aside from our own work (Hajszan et al, 2005, 2009, 2010; Kang et al, 2012; Baka et al, 2017), a large number of studies has investigated synaptic remodeling within the trisynaptic loop, relating it mainly to hippocampusdependent cognitive and affective functions as summarized, e.g., in our recent review (Hajszan, 2020). The number of spine synapses provides a reliable readout of structural connectivity along the trisynaptic loop and can be considered as an anatomical correlate of hippocampal function

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