Stress is the main non-genetic source of psychopathology. Therefore, the identification of neurobiological bases of resilience, the resistance to pathological outcomes of stress, is a most relevant topic of research. It is an accepted view that resilient individuals are those who do not develop helplessness, or other depression-like phenotypes, following a history of stress. In the present review, we discuss the phenotypic differences between mice of the inbred C57BL/6J and DBA/2J strains that could be associated with the strain-specific resistance to helplessness observable in DBA/2J mice. The reviewed results support the hypothesis that resilience to stress-promoted helplessness develops through interactions between a specific genetic makeup and a history of stress, and is associated with an active coping style, a bias toward the use of stimulus-response learning, and specific adaptive changes of mesoaccumbens dopamine transmission under stress. Finally, evidence that compulsivity represents a side effect of the neuroadaptive processes fostering resistance to develop depressive-like phenotypes under stress is discussed.

Learning to cope with stress: psychobiological mechanisms of stress resilience / Cabib, Simona; Campus, Paolo; Valentina, Colelli. - In: REVIEWS IN THE NEUROSCIENCES. - ISSN 0334-1763. - STAMPA. - 23:5-6(2012), pp. 659-672. [10.1515/revneuro-2012-0080]

Learning to cope with stress: psychobiological mechanisms of stress resilience

CABIB, Simona;CAMPUS, PAOLO;
2012

Abstract

Stress is the main non-genetic source of psychopathology. Therefore, the identification of neurobiological bases of resilience, the resistance to pathological outcomes of stress, is a most relevant topic of research. It is an accepted view that resilient individuals are those who do not develop helplessness, or other depression-like phenotypes, following a history of stress. In the present review, we discuss the phenotypic differences between mice of the inbred C57BL/6J and DBA/2J strains that could be associated with the strain-specific resistance to helplessness observable in DBA/2J mice. The reviewed results support the hypothesis that resilience to stress-promoted helplessness develops through interactions between a specific genetic makeup and a history of stress, and is associated with an active coping style, a bias toward the use of stimulus-response learning, and specific adaptive changes of mesoaccumbens dopamine transmission under stress. Finally, evidence that compulsivity represents a side effect of the neuroadaptive processes fostering resistance to develop depressive-like phenotypes under stress is discussed.
2012
adrenal hormones; d2 dopamine receptors; endophenotypes; fitness; habit-like responses; hippocampus
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Learning to cope with stress: psychobiological mechanisms of stress resilience / Cabib, Simona; Campus, Paolo; Valentina, Colelli. - In: REVIEWS IN THE NEUROSCIENCES. - ISSN 0334-1763. - STAMPA. - 23:5-6(2012), pp. 659-672. [10.1515/revneuro-2012-0080]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/510513
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