The association between serotonin transporter availability and the neural correlates of fear bradycardia.
Pieter SchipperMarlies HiemstraKari BoschDesiree NieuwenhuisAnnalisa AdinolfiSabine GlotzbachBart BorghansDora LoprestoGuillén FernándezFloris KlumpersErno J HermansKarin RoelofsMarloes J A G HenckensJudith R HombergPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2019)
Susceptibility to stress-related psychopathology is associated with reduced expression of the serotonin transporter (5-HTT), particularly in combination with stress exposure. Aberrant physiological and neuronal responses to threat may underlie this increased vulnerability. Here, implementing a cross-species approach, we investigated the association between 5-HTT expression and the neural correlates of fear bradycardia, a defensive response linked to vigilance and action preparation. We tested this during threat anticipation induced by a well-established fear conditioning paradigm applied in both humans and rodents. In humans, we studied the effect of the common 5-HTT-linked polymorphic region (5-HTTLPR) on bradycardia and neural responses to anticipatory threat during functional magnetic resonance imaging scanning in healthy volunteers (n = 104). Compared with homozygous long-allele carriers, the 5-HTTLPR short-allele carriers displayed an exaggerated bradycardic response to threat, overall reduced activation of the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), and increased threat-induced connectivity between the amygdala and periaqueductal gray (PAG), which statistically mediated the effect of the 5-HTTLPR genotype on bradycardia. In parallel, 5-HTT knockout (KO) rats also showed exaggerated threat-related bradycardia and behavioral freezing. Immunohistochemistry indicated overall reduced activity of glutamatergic neurons in the mPFC of KO rats and increased activity of central amygdala somatostatin-positive neurons, putatively projecting to the PAG, which-similarly to the human population-mediated the 5-HTT genotype's effect on freezing. Moreover, the ventrolateral PAG of KO rats displayed elevated overall activity and increased relative activation of CaMKII-expressing projection neurons. Our results provide a mechanistic explanation for previously reported associations between 5-HTT gene variance and a stress-sensitive phenotype.
Keyphrases
- prefrontal cortex
- magnetic resonance imaging
- poor prognosis
- spinal cord
- stress induced
- functional connectivity
- computed tomography
- gene expression
- binding protein
- copy number
- spinal cord injury
- multiple sclerosis
- drug induced
- magnetic resonance
- blood brain barrier
- anorexia nervosa
- diabetic rats
- atomic force microscopy
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- high speed