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Publication : Social transmission and buffering of synaptic changes after stress.

First Author  Sterley TL Year  2018
Journal  Nat Neurosci Volume  21
Issue  3 Pages  393-403
PubMed ID  29311741 Mgi Jnum  J:262409
Mgi Id  MGI:6158791 Doi  10.1038/s41593-017-0044-6
Citation  Sterley TL, et al. (2018) Social transmission and buffering of synaptic changes after stress. Nat Neurosci 21(3):393-403
abstractText  Stress can trigger enduring changes in neural circuits and synapses. The behavioral and hormonal consequences of stress can also be transmitted to others, but whether this transmitted stress has similar effects on synapses is not known. We found that authentic stress and transmitted stress in mice primed paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVN) corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) neurons, enabling the induction of metaplasticity at glutamate synapses. In female mice that were subjected to authentic stress, this metaplasticity was diminished following interactions with a naive partner. Transmission from the stressed subject to the naive partner required the activation of PVN CRH neurons in both subject and partner to drive and detect the release of a putative alarm pheromone from the stressed mouse. Finally, metaplasticity could be transmitted sequentially from the stressed subject to multiple partners. Our findings demonstrate that transmitted stress has the same lasting effects on glutamate synapses as authentic stress and reveal an unexpected role for PVN CRH neurons in transmitting distress signals among individuals.
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