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      Regulation of Serotonin1A, Glucocorticoid, and Mineralocorticoid Receptor in Rat and Human Hippocampus: Implications for the Neurobiology of Depression

      , , ,
      Biological Psychiatry
      Elsevier BV

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          The neuroendocrinology of stress and aging: the glucocorticoid cascade hypothesis.

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            Transduction of psychosocial stress into the neurobiology of recurrent affective disorder.

            Early clinical observations and recent systematic studies overwhelmingly document a greater role for psychosocial stressors in association with the first episode of major affective disorder than with subsequent episodes. The author postulates that both sensitization to stressors and episode sensitization occur and become encoded at the level of gene expression. In particular, stressors and the biochemical concomitants of the episodes themselves can induce the protooncogene c-fos and related transcription factors, which then affect the expression of transmitters, receptors, and neuropeptides that alter responsivity in a long-lasting fashion. Thus, both stressors and episodes may leave residual traces and vulnerabilities to further occurrences of affective illness. These data and concepts suggest that the biochemical and anatomical substrates underlying the affective disorders evolve over time as a function of recurrences, as does pharmacological responsivity. This formulation highlights the critical importance of early intervention in the illness in order to prevent malignant transformation to rapid cycling, spontaneous episodes, and refractoriness to drug treatment.
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              Elevated concentrations of CSF corticotropin-releasing factor-like immunoreactivity in depressed patients.

              The possibility that hypersecretion of corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) contributes to the hyperactivity of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis observed in patients with major depression was investigated by measuring the concentration of this peptide in cerebrospinal fluid of normal healthy volunteers and in drug-free patients with DSM-III diagnoses of major depression, schizophrenia, or dementia. When compared to the controls and the other diagnostic groups, the patients with major depression showed significantly increased cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of CRF-like immunoreactivity; in 11 of the 23 depressed patients this immunoreactivity was greater than the highest value in the normal controls. These findings are concordant with the hypothesis that CRF hypersecretion is, at least in part, responsible for the hyperactivity of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis characteristic of major depression.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biological Psychiatry
                Biological Psychiatry
                Elsevier BV
                00063223
                April 1998
                April 1998
                : 43
                : 8
                : 547-573
                Article
                10.1016/S0006-3223(97)00484-8
                9564441
                361c2d59-7d22-41c0-9c33-f540a86cf3bb
                © 1998

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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