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Reiterated male-to-female violence disrupts hippocampal estrogen receptor β expression, prompting anxiety-like behavior.

Jacopo AgrimiLucia BernardeleNaeem SbaitiMarco BrondiDonato D'AngeloMarta CanatoIvan MarchionniChristian U OeingGiussy BarbaraBeatrice VignoliMarco CanossaNina KaludercicGaya SpolveratoAnna RaffaelloClaudia LodovichiMarco Dal MaschioNazareno Paolocci
Published in: iScience (2024)
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a significant public health concern whose neurological/behavioral sequelae remain to be mechanistically explained. Using a mouse model recapitulating an IPV scenario, we evaluated the female brain neuroendocrine alterations produced by a reiterated male-to-female violent interaction (RMFVI). RMFVI prompted anxiety-like behavior in female mice whose hippocampus displayed a marked neuronal loss and hampered neurogenesis, namely reduced BrdU-DCX-positive nuclei and diminished dendritic arborization in the dentate gyrus (DG): effects paralleled by a substantial downregulation of the estrogen receptor β (ERβ). After RMFVI, the DG harbored reduced brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) pools and tyrosine kinase receptor B (TrkB) phosphorylation. Accordingly, ERβ knockout (KO) mice had heightened anxiety and curtailed BDNF levels at baseline while dying prematurely during the RMFVI procedure. Strikingly, injecting an ERβ antagonist or agonist into the wild-type (WT) female hippocampus enhanced or reduced anxiety, respectively. Thus, reiterated male-to-female violence jeopardizes hippocampal homeostasis, perturbing the ERβ/BDNF axis and ultimately instigating anxiety and chronic stress.
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