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Early stress-induced impaired microglial pruning of excitatory synapses on immature CRH-expressing neurons provokes aberrant adult stress responses

Authors :
Jessica L. Bolton
Annabel K. Short
Shivashankar Othy
Cassandra L. Kooiker
Manlin Shao
Benjamin G. Gunn
Jaclyn Beck
Xinglong Bai
Stephanie M. Law
Julie C. Savage
Jeremy J. Lambert
Delia Belelli
Marie-Ève Tremblay
Michael D. Cahalan
Tallie Z. Baram
Source :
Cell reports. 38(13)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Several mental illnesses, characterized by aberrant stress reactivity, often arise after early-life adversity (ELA). However, it is unclear how ELA affects stress-related brain circuit maturation, provoking these enduring vulnerabilities. We find that ELA increases functional excitatory synapses onto stress-sensitive hypothalamic corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH)-expressing neurons, resulting from disrupted developmental synapse pruning by adjacent microglia. Microglial process dynamics and synaptic element engulfment were attenuated in ELA mice, associated with deficient signaling of the microglial phagocytic receptor MerTK. Accordingly, selective chronic chemogenetic activation of ELA microglia increased microglial process dynamics and reduced excitatory synapse density to control levels. Notably, selective early-life activation of ELA microglia normalized adult acute and chronic stress responses, including stress-induced hormone secretion and behavioral threat responses, as well as chronic adrenal hypertrophy of ELA mice. Thus, microglial actions during development are powerful contributors to mechanisms by which ELA sculpts the connectivity of stress-regulating neurons, promoting vulnerability to stress and stress-related mental illnesses.

Details

ISSN :
22111247
Volume :
38
Issue :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3eac06ab58c2f6028247253b3a59d198