Alpha2A and alpha2C-adrenoceptor regulation in the brain: alpha2A changes persist after chronic stress.

2003 
: Stress-induced activation of the central nervous noradrenergic system has been suspected to induce depressive disorders. As episodes of depression often occur some time after a stress experience we investigated whether stress-induced changes in the alpha2-adrenoceptor (alpha2-AR) system persist throughout a post-stress recovery period. Brains of male tree shrews were analysed after 44 days of chronic psychosocial stress and after a subsequent 10-day recovery period. Expression of RNA for alpha2A and alpha2C-adrenoceptors was quantified by in situ hybridization, and receptor binding was determined by in vitro receptor autoradiography. Activities of the sympathetic nervous system and of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis were increased during chronic stress but normalized during recovery. Alpha2A-AR RNA in the glutamatergic neurons of the lateral reticular nucleus was elevated significantly after stress and after recovery (by 29% and 17%). In the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus, subtype A expression was enhanced after recovery (by 33%). In the locus coeruleus, subtype A autoreceptor expression was not changed significantly. Subtype C expression in the caudate nucleus and putamen was elevated by stress (by 5 and 4%, respectively) but normalized during recovery. Quantification of 3H-RX821002 binding revealed receptor upregulation during stress and/or recovery. Our data therefore show: (i) that chronic psychosocial stress differentially regulates expression of alpha2-adrenoceptor subtypes A and C; (ii) that subtype A heteroreceptor expression is persistently upregulated whereas (iii), subtype C upregulation is only transient. The present findings coincide with post mortem studies in depressed patients revealing upregulation of alpha2A-ARs.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    44
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []