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      Crossroads of corticotropin releasing hormone, corticosteroids and monoamines : About a biological interface between stress and depression

      Neurotoxicity Research
      Informa UK Limited

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          Abstract

          Mental disorders are frequently preceded by stressful events or situations. Depression is a typical case in point. This raises the question, is depression - or possibly better: are certain forms of depression - caused by stress? Can stress be a true pathogenic factor? Phrased differently: can stress destabilize neuronal systems in the central nervous system to such an extent that depressive symptoms are generated? This question is discussed with the corticotrophin releasing hormone (CRH) and MA systems and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis as major foci. The following issues are explored: the effect of antidepressants on corticosteroid receptor gene expression; the behavioral sequellae of CRH administration; CRH disturbances in depression; the impact of early life adversity on the development of the CRH system and on stress reactivity; the interrelationships of stress hormones and monoaminergic (MA ergic) transmission and finally the therapeutic potential of CRH and cortisol antagonists. The available data suggest that CRH overdrive and cortisol overproduction may play a pathogenic role in the occurrence of certain types of depression, directly and/or indirectly, i.e. by induction or exacerbation of disturbances in MA ergic transmission. Stress should, thus, become a major focus of biological depression research.

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          Coping styles in animals: current status in behavior and stress-physiology.

          This paper summarizes the current views on coping styles as a useful concept in understanding individual adaptive capacity and vulnerability to stress-related disease. Studies in feral populations indicate the existence of a proactive and a reactive coping style. These coping styles seem to play a role in the population ecology of the species. Despite domestication, genetic selection and inbreeding, the same coping styles can, to some extent, also be observed in laboratory and farm animals. Coping styles are characterized by consistent behavioral and neuroendocrine characteristics, some of which seem to be causally linked to each other. Evidence is accumulating that the two coping styles might explain a differential vulnerability to stress mediated disease due to the differential adaptive value of the two coping styles and the accompanying neuroendocrine differentiation.
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            Neurocircuitry of stress: central control of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenocortical axis.

            Integration of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal stress response occurs by way of interactions between stress-sensitive brain circuitry and neuroendocrine neurons of the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN). Stressors involving an immediate physiologic threat ('systemic' stressors) are relayed directly to the PVN, probably via brainstem catecholaminergic projections. By contrast, stressors requiring interpretation by higher brain structures ('processive' stressors) appear to be channeled through limbic forebrain circuits. Forebrain limbic sites connect with the PVN via interactions with GABA-containing neurons in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, preoptic area and hypothalamus. Thus, final elaboration of processive stress responses is likely to involve modulation of PVN GABAergic tone. The functional and neuroanatomical data obtained suggest that disease processes involving inappropriate stress control involve dysfunction of processive stress pathways.
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              The neuroendocrinology of stress and aging: the glucocorticoid cascade hypothesis.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Neurotoxicity Research
                neurotox res
                Informa UK Limited
                1029-8428
                1476-3524
                January 2002
                January 2002
                : 4
                : 5-6
                : 531-555
                Article
                10.1080/1029842021000022115
                12754165
                a5e5e534-b5c5-45fd-ac71-7001d4b4c0bc
                © 2002
                History

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