11 research outputs found

    A Rapid Release of Corticosteroid-Binding Globulin from the Liver Restrains the Glucocorticoid Hormone Response to Acute Stress

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    A strict control of glucocorticoid hormone responses to stress is essential for health. In blood, glucocorticoid hormones are for the largest part bound to corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG), and just a minor fraction of hormone is free. Only free glucocorticoid hormone is able to exert biological effects, but little is known about its regulation during stress. We found, using a dual-probe in vivo microdialysis method, that in rats, the forced-swim stress-induced rise in free corticosterone (its major glucocorticoid hormone) is strikingly similar in the blood and in target compartments such as the subcutaneous tissue and the brain. However, in all compartments, the free corticosterone response was delayed by 20–30 min as compared with the total corticosterone response in the blood. We discovered that CBG is the key player in this delay. Swim stress evoked a fast (within 5 min) and profound rise in CBG protein and binding capacity in the blood through a release of the protein from the liver. Thus, the increase in circulating CBG levels after stress restrains the rise in free corticosterone concentrations for approximately 20 min in the face of mounting total hormone levels in the circulation. The stress-induced increase in CBG seems to be specific for moderate and strong stressors. Both restraint stress and forced swimming caused an increase in circulating CBG, whereas its levels were not affected by mild novelty stress. Our data uncover a new, highly dynamic role for CBG in the regulation of glucocorticoid hormone physiology after acute stress

    Antidepressive effects of targeting ELK-1 signal transduction

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    International audienceDepression, a devastating psychiatric disorder, is a leadingcause of disability worldwide. Current antidepressants addressspecific symptoms of the disease, but there is vast roomfor improvement1. In this respect, new compounds that actbeyond classical antidepressants to target signal transductionpathways governing synaptic plasticity and cellular resilienceare highly warranted2–4. The extracellular signal–regulatedkinase (ERK) pathway is implicated in mood regulation5–7, butits pleiotropic functions and lack of target specificity prohibitoptimal drug development. Here, we identified the transcriptionfactor ELK-1, an ERK downstream partner8, as a specificsignaling module in the pathophysiology and treatment ofdepression that can be targeted independently of ERK. ELK1mRNA was upregulated in postmortem hippocampal tissuesfrom depressed suicides; in blood samples from depressedindividuals, failure to reduce ELK1 expression was associatedwith resistance to treatment. In mice, hippocampal ELK-1 overexpressionper se produced depressive behaviors; conversely,the selective inhibition of ELK-1 activation prevented depression-like molecular, plasticity and behavioral states inducedby stress. Our work stresses the importance of target selectivityfor a successful approach for signal-transduction-basedantidepressants, singles out ELK-1 as a depression-relevanttransducer downstream of ERK and brings proof-of-conceptevidence for the druggability of ELK-1
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