Publication | Open Access
The Dysphoric Component of Stress Is Encoded by Activation of the Dynorphin κ-Opioid System
594
Citations
38
References
2008
Year
Pain MedicineMolecular PainSocial SciencesStress IsStressCrf2 Receptor StimulationStress BiomarkersChronic StressStress HormonePsychiatryBehavioral NeuroscienceMedicineBehavioural PharmacologyBehavioral PharmacologyNeuropharmacologyStress ResponseNervous SystemPain ResearchAddictionPhysiologyStress PhysiologyNeuropeptide ReceptorDynorphin κ-Opioid SystemNeuroscienceBiological PsychiatryPain MechanismDysphoric Component
Stress has both positive and negative motivational effects, yet the adverse consequences of chronic, uncontrollable stress on health remain poorly understood. The study investigates whether the dysphoric aspects of chronic stress are encoded by dynorphin acting on stress‑related neuronal circuits. Experiments in mice show that stress‑induced aversive behaviors are mediated by dynorphin release and κ‑opioid receptor activation—blocked by KOR antagonists or dynorphin deletion—and that CRF2 receptor stimulation drives this pathway, with dynorphin‑dependent KOR activation observed in key limbic regions, highlighting dynorphin as a central mediator of dysphoria and KOR antagonists as promising therapeutics.
Stress is a complex human experience having both positive and negative motivational properties. When chronic and uncontrollable, the adverse effects of stress on human health are considerable and yet poorly understood. Here, we report that the dysphoric properties of chronic stress are encoded by the endogenous opioid peptide dynorphin acting on specific stress-related neuronal circuits. Using different forms of stress presumed to evoke dysphoria in mice, we found that repeated forced swim and inescapable footshock both produced aversive behaviors that were blocked by a kappa-opioid receptor (KOR) antagonist and absent in mice lacking dynorphin. Injection of corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) or urocortin III, key mediators of the stress response, produced place aversion that was also blocked by dynorphin gene deletion or KOR antagonism. CRF-induced place aversion was blocked by the CRF2 receptor antagonist antisauvigine-30, but not by the CRF1 receptor antagonist antalarmin. In contrast, place aversion induced by the KOR agonist U50,488 was not blocked by antisauvigine-30. These results suggest that the aversive effects of stress were mediated by CRF2 receptor stimulation of dynorphin release and subsequent KOR activation. Using a phospho-selective antibody directed against the activated KOR to image sites of dynorphin action in the brain, we found that stress and CRF each caused dynorphin-dependent KOR activation in the basolateral amygdala, nucleus accumbens, dorsal raphe, and hippocampus. The convergence of stress-induced aversive inputs on the dynorphin system was unexpected, implicates dynorphin as a key mediator of dysphoria, and emphasizes kappa-receptor antagonists as promising therapeutics.
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