Spelling suggestions: "subject:"hypothalamuspituitaryadrenal axis"" "subject:"hypothalamopituitaryadrenal axis""
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Developmental ethanol exposure and its impact on behaviour and HPI axis activity of zebrafishBaiamonte, Matteo January 2015 (has links)
Ethanol exposure during pregnancy is one of the leading causes of preventable birth defects, leading to a range of symptoms collectively known as fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD). More moderate levels of prenatal ethanol exposure (PNE) lead to a range of behavioural deficits including aggression, poor social interaction, poor cognitive performance and increased likelihood of addiction in later life. Current theories suggest that adaptation in the hypothalamic-pituitaryadrenal (HPA) axis and neuroendocrine systems contributes to mood alterations underlying behavioural deficits and vulnerability to addiction. This has led to the suggestion that corticotrophin-releasing factor (CRF) antagonists and glucocorticoid (steroid) inhibitors may be potential therapeutics to address the deficits of PNE and for the treatment of addiction. The zebrafish (Danio rerio) has several advantages over mammalian models, such as low cost of maintenance, short life cycle, easy embryological manipulation and the possibility of large-scale genetic screening. By using this model, our aim is to determine whether developmental ethanol exposure provokes changes in the HPA axis (HPI axis in fish), as it does in mammalian models, therefore opening the possibilities of using zebrafish to elucidate the mechanisms involved, and to test novel therapeutics to alleviate deleterious symptoms. Thus this thesis focuses solely on the effect of developmental ethanol exposure on the functioning of the HPI axis in zebrafish. Stress-reactivity in zebrafish larvae ethanol-treated 1-9 days post 4 fertilisation (dpf) was assessed using thigmotaxis and thigmotaxis following airstress. In both tests, lower stress-related responses were obtained with ethanol treated animals, in that they spent less time at the edges of the apparatus (P<0.01, n=3). They also showed lower total body cortisol (P=0.04, n=14). Larvae also showed the same behaviour pattern two weeks after ethanol exposure, (23dpf) (P=0.04, n=3), again with reduced total cortisol (P=0.03, n=4). HPI-related gene transcription was also assessed in 9dpf ethanol treated zebrafish larvae, by qRT-PCR. Revealing up-regulation of CRH, CRHBP and CRHR2, normalized against β-Actin, Elav1 and Gap43 housekeeping genes. In situ hybridization revealed no spatial changes in CRH, CRH-BP and POMC with animals at the same stage. Behavioural stress-reactivity differences in 6-months old adults that had been exposed developmentally to ethanol were assessed using novel tank diving and thigmotaxis. Both assays indicated a decrease in stress-like behaviour due to early ethanol exposure compared to controls (P<0.05, n=5 both). Finally, cortisol levels were assayed from 9dpf larvae and 6-month-old adults that had been treated with ethanol during early development showed a significant reduction in cortisol output when air-exposed stressed compared to controls (P=0.04, n=5). Conclusion: Early ethanol exposure produced significant changes in cortisol, HPI gene mRNA expression and stress-reactive behaviour in 9dpf animals. Changes in cortisol and behaviour were still detected in 6-months old adults, developmentally treated with ethanol, indicating that early ethanol exposure has permanent effects on the HPI axis. 5 As our data contradicts the findings in mammalian literature where early ethanol exposure increases stress-like behaviour in later life, it is also possible that more permanent effects of PNE in mammals may arise through maternal-offspring interactions, during and post gestation, such as breastfeeding and maternal grooming of the offspring, which are absent in the zebrafish model.
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Alteração do funcionamento do eixo HHA na depressão pós-parto e correlações com polimorfismos do gene do CRHR1 e com a neuroquímica do giro do cíngulo anterior / Altered functioning of the HPA axis in depressed postpartum women and correlations with polymorphisms in the CRHR1 gene and with the neurochemistry of the anterior cingulate gyrusRezende, Marcos Gonçalves de 15 April 2016 (has links)
A depressão pós-parto (DPP) tem sido associada com alterações no funcionamento do eixo hipotálamo-hipófise-adrenal (HHA), mas pouco se sabe do envolvimento de estruturas cerebrais, ou outros mecanismos subjacentes a estas alterações. Uma hipótese fundamental é que o estresse inerente ao período puerperal, vulnerabilidade individual e, principalmente, as alterações hormonais decorrentes do final da gravidez desempenham um importante papel causal nas alterações do eixo HHA e na incidência da DPP. Estudos sobre o transtorno depressivo maior mostram que alterações funcionais em áreas cerebrais como o giro do cíngulo anterior (GCA) estão relacionadas com humor deprimido, e outros pesquisadores investigaram a relação entre a neuroquímica do GCA e a atividade do eixo HHA. Pesquisas sobre genes de interesse do eixo HHA também têm reportado associações entre polimorfismos nestes genes e alterações nos níveis de cortisol. O presente trabalho testou a hipótese de que mulheres deprimidas no puerpério remoto apresentariam atenuação no funcionamento do eixo HHA, medido pelos níveis de cortisol em 30 minutos após o despertar (CAR) e ao longo da variação diurna (VD); e também que polimorfismos em um gene do eixo HHA, o gene promotor do receptor do tipo 1 do hormônio liberador de corticotrofina (CRHR1), estariam associados com sintomas depressivos no puerpério para prever os níveis de cortisol; e finalmente que as alterações verificadas no funcionamento do eixo HHA de puérperas deprimidas teriam relação com a neuroquímica do GCA. Os resultados indicaram que (1) ao redor do sexto mês após o parto, o CAR e a VD estavam atenuados em puérperas deprimidas comparadas com puérperas eutímicas, e com controles saudáveis não-puérperas; (2) os metabólitos presentes no GCA tinham correlação com as medidas do eixo HHA nas puérperas deprimidas; e (3) a presença de sintomas depressivos em associação com polimorfismos do CRHR1 previram alterações nos níveis de cortisol. No geral, estes resultados sugerem que as alterações do eixo HHA de puérperas deprimidas no puerpério tardio estão associadas com fatores genéticos e com a neuroquímica funcional do GCA / Postpartum depression (PPD) has been associated with changes in the functioning of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, but little is known about the involvement of brain structures, or other mechanisms underlying these changes. A key assumption is that stress inherent to the puerperal period, individual vulnerability, and especially the hormonal changes resulting from the end of pregnancy play an important causal role in the alterations of the HPA axis and in the incidence of PPD. Studies on major depressive disorder show that functional changes in brain areas, such as the anterior cingulate gyrus (ACG), are related to depressed mood, and other researchers investigated the relation between the neurochemistry of the ACG and the activity of the HPA axis. Research on the HPA axis genes of interest have also reported associations between polymorphisms in these genes and changes in cortisol levels. The present study tested the hypothesis that depressed women in the remote postpartum period would show attenuation in the functioning of the HPA axis, measured by cortisol levels 30 minutes after awakening (cortisol awakening response, CAR) and by diurnal variation (DV) throughout the day; and also that polymorphisms in a gene of the HPA axis, the promoter gene of the corticotropin releasing hormone receptor type 1 (CRH-R1), would present association with depressive symptoms in the postpartum period to predict the levels of cortisol; and finally that the changes in the functioning of the HPA axis of postpartum depressed women have a relationship with the neurochemistry of the ACG. Results indicated that (1) around the sixth month after delivery, CAR and DV were attenuated in depressed postpartum women compared with euthymic postpartum women and with non-postpartum healthy control women; (2) metabolites present in the ACG showed correlation with measures of the HPA axis in depressed postpartum women; and (3) the presence of depressive symptoms in association with CRHR1 polymorphisms predicted changes in cortisol levels. Overall, these results suggest that changes in the functioning of the HPA axis of depressed postpartum women in the remote postpartum period are associated with genetic factors and with the functional neurochemistry of the ACG
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Alteração do funcionamento do eixo HHA na depressão pós-parto e correlações com polimorfismos do gene do CRHR1 e com a neuroquímica do giro do cíngulo anterior / Altered functioning of the HPA axis in depressed postpartum women and correlations with polymorphisms in the CRHR1 gene and with the neurochemistry of the anterior cingulate gyrusMarcos Gonçalves de Rezende 15 April 2016 (has links)
A depressão pós-parto (DPP) tem sido associada com alterações no funcionamento do eixo hipotálamo-hipófise-adrenal (HHA), mas pouco se sabe do envolvimento de estruturas cerebrais, ou outros mecanismos subjacentes a estas alterações. Uma hipótese fundamental é que o estresse inerente ao período puerperal, vulnerabilidade individual e, principalmente, as alterações hormonais decorrentes do final da gravidez desempenham um importante papel causal nas alterações do eixo HHA e na incidência da DPP. Estudos sobre o transtorno depressivo maior mostram que alterações funcionais em áreas cerebrais como o giro do cíngulo anterior (GCA) estão relacionadas com humor deprimido, e outros pesquisadores investigaram a relação entre a neuroquímica do GCA e a atividade do eixo HHA. Pesquisas sobre genes de interesse do eixo HHA também têm reportado associações entre polimorfismos nestes genes e alterações nos níveis de cortisol. O presente trabalho testou a hipótese de que mulheres deprimidas no puerpério remoto apresentariam atenuação no funcionamento do eixo HHA, medido pelos níveis de cortisol em 30 minutos após o despertar (CAR) e ao longo da variação diurna (VD); e também que polimorfismos em um gene do eixo HHA, o gene promotor do receptor do tipo 1 do hormônio liberador de corticotrofina (CRHR1), estariam associados com sintomas depressivos no puerpério para prever os níveis de cortisol; e finalmente que as alterações verificadas no funcionamento do eixo HHA de puérperas deprimidas teriam relação com a neuroquímica do GCA. Os resultados indicaram que (1) ao redor do sexto mês após o parto, o CAR e a VD estavam atenuados em puérperas deprimidas comparadas com puérperas eutímicas, e com controles saudáveis não-puérperas; (2) os metabólitos presentes no GCA tinham correlação com as medidas do eixo HHA nas puérperas deprimidas; e (3) a presença de sintomas depressivos em associação com polimorfismos do CRHR1 previram alterações nos níveis de cortisol. No geral, estes resultados sugerem que as alterações do eixo HHA de puérperas deprimidas no puerpério tardio estão associadas com fatores genéticos e com a neuroquímica funcional do GCA / Postpartum depression (PPD) has been associated with changes in the functioning of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, but little is known about the involvement of brain structures, or other mechanisms underlying these changes. A key assumption is that stress inherent to the puerperal period, individual vulnerability, and especially the hormonal changes resulting from the end of pregnancy play an important causal role in the alterations of the HPA axis and in the incidence of PPD. Studies on major depressive disorder show that functional changes in brain areas, such as the anterior cingulate gyrus (ACG), are related to depressed mood, and other researchers investigated the relation between the neurochemistry of the ACG and the activity of the HPA axis. Research on the HPA axis genes of interest have also reported associations between polymorphisms in these genes and changes in cortisol levels. The present study tested the hypothesis that depressed women in the remote postpartum period would show attenuation in the functioning of the HPA axis, measured by cortisol levels 30 minutes after awakening (cortisol awakening response, CAR) and by diurnal variation (DV) throughout the day; and also that polymorphisms in a gene of the HPA axis, the promoter gene of the corticotropin releasing hormone receptor type 1 (CRH-R1), would present association with depressive symptoms in the postpartum period to predict the levels of cortisol; and finally that the changes in the functioning of the HPA axis of postpartum depressed women have a relationship with the neurochemistry of the ACG. Results indicated that (1) around the sixth month after delivery, CAR and DV were attenuated in depressed postpartum women compared with euthymic postpartum women and with non-postpartum healthy control women; (2) metabolites present in the ACG showed correlation with measures of the HPA axis in depressed postpartum women; and (3) the presence of depressive symptoms in association with CRHR1 polymorphisms predicted changes in cortisol levels. Overall, these results suggest that changes in the functioning of the HPA axis of depressed postpartum women in the remote postpartum period are associated with genetic factors and with the functional neurochemistry of the ACG
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