Early life stress decreases cell proliferation and the number of putative adult neural stem cells in the adult hypothalamus
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| Publication date | 2021 |
| Journal | Stress - the International Journal on the Biology of Stress |
| Volume | Issue number | 24 | 2 |
| Pages (from-to) | 189-195 |
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| Abstract |
Stress is a potent environmental factor that can confer potent and enduring effects on brain structure and function. Exposure to stress during early life (ELS) has been linked to a wide range of consequences later in life. In particular, ELS exerts lasting effects on neurogenesis in the adult hippocampus, suggesting that ELS is a significant regulator of adult neural stem cell numbers and function. Here, we investigated the effect of ELS on cell proliferation and the numbers of neural stem/precursor cells in another neurogenic region: the hypothalamus of adult mice. We show that ELS has long-term suppressive effects on cell proliferation in the hypothalamic parenchyma and reduces the numbers of putative hypothalamic neural stem/precursor cells at 4 months of age. Specifically, ELS reduced the number of PCNA + cells present in hypothalamic areas surrounding the 3rd ventricle with a specific reduction in the proliferation of Sox2+/Nestin-GFP + putative stem cells present in the median eminence at the base of the 3rd ventricle. Furthermore, ELS reduced the total numbers of β-tanycytes lining the ventral 3rd ventricle, without affecting α-tanycyte numbers in more dorsal areas. These results are the first to indicate that ELS significantly reduces proliferation and β-tanycyte numbers in the adult hypothalamus, and may have (patho)physiological consequences for metabolic regulation or other hypothalamic functions in which β-tanycytes are involved. Lay summary:- We show for the first time, long-lasting effects of exposure to early life stress on cellular plasticity in the hypothalamus of adult mice. - Stress in the first week of life resulted in reduced numbers of (proliferating) stem cells in specific subregions of the hypothalamus at an adult age. - This loss of stem cells and decreased proliferation highlights how early life stress can affect hypothalamic functions in later life. |
| Document type | Article |
| Note | With supplementary file |
| Language | English |
| Related dataset | Early life stress decreases cell proliferation and the number of putative adult neural stem cells in the adult hypothalamus |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1080/10253890.2021.1879787 |
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