Canna~Fangled Abstracts

Prefrontal endocannabinoids, stress controllability and resilience: A hypothesis.

By April 6, 2017No Comments
Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. 2017 Apr 6. pii: S0278-5846(16)30247-0. doi: 10.1016/j.pnpbp.2017.04.004.
[Epub ahead of print]

Abstract

pm-2-site-207Stressor exposure is a predisposing risk factor for many psychiatric conditions such as PTSD and depression. However, stressors do not influence all individuals equally and in response to an identical stressor some individuals may be vulnerable while others are resilient. While various biological and behavioral factors contribute to vulnerability versus resilience, an individual’s degree of control over the stressor is among the most potent. Even with only one experience with control over stress, behavioral control has been shown to have acute and long-lasting stress-mitigating effects. This suggests that control both blunts the response to acute stress and prepares the subject to be resilient to future stressors. In this review, we first summarize the evidence which suggests the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) is a critical component of stressor controllability circuits and a locus of neuroplasticity supporting the acute and long-lasting consequences of control. We next review the central endocannabinoid (eCB) system as a possible mediator of short and long-term synaptic transmission in the vmPFC, and offer a hypothesis whereby eCBs regulate vmPFC circuits engaged when a subject has control over stress and may contribute to the encoding of acute stress coping into long lasting stressor resilience.

KEYWORDS:

2-AG; Cannabinoid receptor; Depolarization induced suppression of inhibition; Endocannabinoids; Prelimbic; Stressor controllability; Ventromedial prefrontal cortex

PMID: 28392485

 

DOI: 10.1016/j.pnpbp.2017.04.004

Publication type

Publication type

twin memes II