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. 2023 Oct 1:237:109620.
doi: 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2023.109620. Epub 2023 May 30.

The insula mediates the effects of glucocorticoids in anxiety

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The insula mediates the effects of glucocorticoids in anxiety

Tamara Bahamonde et al. Neuropharmacology. .

Abstract

Increased activity in the insula has been consistently reported to be associated with anxiety and anxiety-related disorders. However, little is known on how the insula regulates anxiety. The present study aims at determining the role of the insula on the effects of glucocorticoids in anxiety. A combination of pharmacological manipulations, including blockade of adrenal GC synthesis by metyrapone and intra-insular microinjections of corticosterone, corticosterone-BSA, mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) antagonist spironolactone and glucocorticoid receptor (GR) antagonist mifepristone, were used to assess the short-term (5 min) effects of intra-insular corticosterone in two anxiety-like behaviors in male Sprague-Dawley rats. The elevated plus maze (EPM) and Novelty Suppressed Feeding (hyponeophagia) were utilized. We found that corticosterone in the insula is sufficient to prevent the anxiolytic effects corticosterone synthesis blockade in anxiety, and that intra-insular corticosterone has anxiolytic or anxiogenic effects depending on the amount of corticosterone microinjected and the arousal associated to the test, without affecting the HPA axis. Glucocorticoid anxiolytic effects in the insula are mediated by MRs, while its anxiogenic effects are dependent on a mifepristone-sensitive membrane-bound mechanism. Anxiety appears to be modulated at the insula through a competition between fast MR-dependent anxiolytic and membrane-associated anxiogenic signaling pathways that orchestrate the behavioral response to stress and determines the resulting level of anxiety.

Keywords: Anxiety; Corticosterone; EPM; Elevated plus maze; GR, Glucocorticoid receptor; Glucocorticoids; Hyponeophagia; Insula; Insular cortex; MR, Mineralocorticoid receptor; Membrane-associated glucocorticoids; Non-genomic glucocorticoid; Novelty suppressed feeding test.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of competing interest The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

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