Stress duration modulates the spatiotemporal patterns of spine formation in the basolateral amygdala
National Centre for Biological Sciences · Rockefeller University
Abstract
It has long been hypothesized that morphological and numerical alterations in dendritic spines underlie long-term structural encoding of experiences. Here we investigate the efficacy of aversive experience in the form of acute immobilization stress (AIS) and chronic immobilization stress (CIS) in modulating spine density in the basolateral amygdala (BLA) of male rats. We find that CIS elicits a robust increase in spine density across primary and secondary branches of BLA spiny neurons. We observed this CIS-induced spinogenesis in the BLA 1 d after the termination of CIS. In contrast, AIS fails to affect spine density or dendritic arborization when measured 1 d later. Strikingly, the same AIS causes a gradual…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 7.06
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 77
Authors
5- RMRupshi MitraCorresponding
National Centre for Biological Sciences, Rockefeller University
- SPShantanu P. Jadhav
National Centre for Biological Sciences, Rockefeller University
- BSBruce S. McEwen
National Centre for Biological Sciences, Rockefeller University
- AVAjai Vyas
National Centre for Biological Sciences, Rockefeller University
- SCSumantra Chattarji
National Centre for Biological Sciences, Rockefeller University
Topics & keywords
- Dendritic spine
- Basolateral amygdala
- Amygdala
- Neuroscience
- Chronic stress
- SPINE (molecular biology)
- Anxiety
- Psychology
- Good health and well-being