Loading…

Loading grant details…

Completed RESEARCH GRANT UKRI Gateway to Research

Sex differences in stress-induced corticosteroid receptor interaction with the rat brain genome: Gene transcriptional and behavioural implications

£4.37M GBP

Funder Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
Recipient Organization University of Bristol
Country United Kingdom
Start Date Dec 01, 2021
End Date May 30, 2025
Duration 1,276 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source UKRI Gateway to Research
Grant ID BB/V015389/1
Grant Description

Stress strongly influences the lives of both humans and animals. Psychological stress, like marital problems and bullying, is very debilitating for mental health in humans. Our farmed and companion animals can also suffer from psychological stress such as overcrowding, long-distance transportation and abuse.

Successful coping with such stressful events involves adaptive processes in the brain to increase the individual's resilience. To help people to cope with stress in their lives, to develop directives to reduce stress and to improve wellbeing of our companion and farmed animals, we need to increase our understanding of how the brain responds to psychologically stressful events.

Presently, however, we do not fully understand how the healthy brain generates physiological and behavioural responses to stressful events and adapts in the long-term to such events.

Stressful events result in the secretion of glucocorticoid (GC) hormones ('stress hormones') from the adrenal glands into the blood. GCs act in the brain to coordinate physiological and behavioural responses to stress through binding to two different GC hormone-binding 'receptors'. These receptors, called MRs and GRs, are protein molecules located in nerve cells.

Stress-induced GCs bind to these receptors resulting in translocation to the cell nucleus. The hormone-receptor complex can then bind to certain genes within the DNA and regulate the expression of those genes. These genes are thought to be important to change the function of nerve cells in order to respond and adapt properly to the challenge.

Recently, we made significant progress in elucidating the genes and their functions affected by MR and GR after stress. It should be underscored, however, that this work, like most work in the stress/GC field, was conducted on male experimental animals (e.g. rats). Currently, it is completely unknown how MR and GR affect brain function at the gene level in females.

This knowledge is however of great importance because females process and respond to stressful events differently than males. Clearly, the present situation in this scientific field is highly surprisingly given that half of humanity and a significant proportion of our companion/farmed animals is female.

Therefore, it is our aim to investigate how GCs via MR and GR affect the activity of genes in the female rat brain after stress to gain insight into why females respond differently to stress than males. Our first step will be to investigate the entire genome of both the female and male brain for the identity of the genes interacting with MR and GR after a stressful challenge and how this interaction alters the activity of these genes.

We will conduct this investigation at different stages of the females' oestrus cycle. Furthermore, using a bioinformatics process called pathway analysis, this study will allow us to identify the molecular, cellular and behavioural functions regulated by MRs and GRs after stress comparatively between the two sexes. These analyses will provide us with a list of genes of interest for further study.

Subsequently, we will compare males and females in their response to different forms of stress because they process challenging situations differently. Female sex hormones like oestrogens are thought to be strongly involved in the different responses to stress in males and females. Therefore, in a separate study we will investigate the role of these hormones by inhibiting their synthesis and determine the impact on the molecular action of MR and GR in the brain after stress.

Finally, as males and females show differences in emotionality which may be underpinned by differences in GC action, we will study the interaction of MR and GR with genes of interest in both sexes and their anxiety-related behaviour after administration of an anxiety-inducing drug. This work will substantially contribute to closing the gap in knowledge about how stress affects brain function in females.

All Grantees

University of Bristol

Advertisement
Discover thousands of grant opportunities
Advertisement
Browse Grants on GrantFunds
Interested in applying for this grant?

Complete our application form to express your interest and we'll guide you through the process.

Apply for This Grant