Szebik Huba, Miskolczi Christina, Bruzsik Bíborka, Balla Gyula, Szabó Soma, Biró László, Mikics Éva
Translational Behavioral Neuroscience Research Group, HUN-REN Institute of Experimental Medicine, Budapest, Hungary.
Semmelweis University, Doctoral School, Budapest, Hungary.
Neurobiol Stress. 2025 Mar 26;36:100722. doi: 10.1016/j.ynstr.2025.100722. eCollection 2025 May.
Aggression is a complex behavior influenced by developmental experiences, internal state, and social context, yet its neurobiological underpinnings remain insufficiently understood. The serotonergic system, particularly the serotonin transporter (SERT), plays a crucial role in aggression regulation. Here, we investigated region-specific, dynamic changes in SERT expression following aggressive interactions and in mice subjected to early-life social adversity. We found that aggressive encounters (resident-intruder test) triggered a significant, rapid increase in SERT immunoreactivity within 90 min, accompanied by neuronal activation in aggression-related brain regions, including the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), lateral septum (LS), medial amygdala (MeA), ventromedial hypothalamus (VMHvl), lateral habenula (LH), and dorsal raphe (DR), but not in the paraventricular thalamus (PVT). Notably, this SERT upregulation occurred across the aggression circuitry but was accompanied by a significant increase in 5-HT levels only in the mPFC, a key region in top-down regulation of social and aggressive behavior. This SERT upregulation was not observed following exposure to a non-social challenge, suggesting that it may be more specifically associated with social contexts. Using super-resolution microscopy, we identified an increased density of SERT localization points within serotonergic mPFC axons after an aggressive encounter. Social isolation during adolescence, a model of early social neglect, impaired this rapid SERT response, particularly in the ventral and medial orbitofrontal regions, and altered the relationship between SERT levels and aggression-related behaviors. These findings demonstrate that SERT expression undergoes rapid, experience-dependent plasticity in response to social aggression, and that early-life adversity disrupts this adaptive mechanism, providing new insights into the serotonergic regulation of aggression and its potential relevance for stress-related social dysfunctions.
攻击行为是一种受发育经历、内在状态和社会环境影响的复杂行为,但其神经生物学基础仍未得到充分理解。血清素能系统,尤其是血清素转运体(SERT),在攻击行为调节中起着关键作用。在此,我们研究了攻击互动后以及遭受早期社会逆境的小鼠中SERT表达的区域特异性动态变化。我们发现,攻击性遭遇(定居者 - 入侵者测试)在90分钟内引发了SERT免疫反应性的显著快速增加,同时在与攻击相关的脑区,包括内侧前额叶皮质(mPFC)、外侧隔区(LS)、内侧杏仁核(MeA)、腹内侧下丘脑(VMHvl)、外侧缰核(LH)和中缝背核(DR)中出现神经元激活,但室旁丘脑(PVT)中未出现。值得注意的是,这种SERT上调发生在整个攻击神经回路中,但仅在mPFC中5 - HT水平显著升高,mPFC是社会和攻击行为自上而下调节的关键区域。在暴露于非社会挑战后未观察到这种SERT上调,这表明它可能更具体地与社会环境相关。使用超分辨率显微镜,我们发现在攻击性遭遇后,血清素能mPFC轴突内SERT定位点的密度增加。青春期的社会隔离,一种早期社会忽视的模型,损害了这种快速的SERT反应,特别是在腹侧和内侧眶额叶区域,并改变了SERT水平与攻击相关行为之间的关系。这些发现表明,SERT表达在对社会攻击的反应中经历快速的、依赖经验的可塑性,并且早期生活逆境会破坏这种适应性机制,为攻击行为的血清素能调节及其与应激相关的社会功能障碍的潜在相关性提供了新的见解。