6533b82afe1ef96bd128c350

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Reconceptualising resilience within a translational framework is supported by unique and brain-region specific transcriptional signatures in mice

Ulrich SchmittSoojin RyuMarianne B. MüllerThomas LingnerSarah AyashRaffael Kalisch

subject

Social defeatBrain regionmedia_common.quotation_subjectExtinction (psychology)Psychological resilienceFear conditioningResilience (network)Social avoidancePsychologyConditioned learningNeuroscienceBiological Psychiatrymedia_common

description

ABSTRACTChronic social defeat (CSD) in mice has been increasingly employed in experimental resilience research. Particularly, the degree of CSD-induced social avoidance is used to classify animals into resilient (socially non-avoidant) versus susceptible (avoidant). In-spired by human data pointing to threat-safety discrimination and responsiveness to extinction training of aversive memories as characteristics of resilient individuals, we here describe a translationally informed stratification which identified three phenotypic subgroups of mice following CSD: the Discriminating-avoiders, characterised by successful social threat-safety discrimination and successful extinction of social avoidance; the Indis-criminate-avoiders, showing aversive response generalisation, and the Non-avoiders (absence of social avoidance) displaying impaired conditioned learning. Furthermore, and supporting the biological validity of our approach, we uncovered subgroup-specific transcriptional signatures in classical fear conditioning and anxiety-related brain regions. Our reconceptualisation of resilience in mice refines the currently used dichotomous classification and contributes to advancing future translational approaches.

https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.11.15.383489