Exposure to aversive events during sensitive developmental periods can affect the preferential coping strategy adopted by individuals later in life, leading to either stress-related psychiatric disorders, including depression, or to well-adaptation to future adversity and sources of stress, a behavior phenotype termed “resilience”.
We have previously shown that interfering with the development of mother-pups bond with the Repeated Cross Fostering (RCF) stress protocol can induce resilience to depression-like phenotype in adult C57BL/6J female mice. Here, we used patch-clamp recording in midbrain slice combined with both
in vivo
and
ex vivo
pharmacology to test our hypothesis of a link between electrophysiological modifications of dopaminergic neurons in the intermediate Ventral Tegmental Area (VTA) of RCF animals and behavioral resilience. We found reduced hyperpolarization-activated (I
h
) cation current amplitude and evoked firing in VTA dopaminergic neurons from both young and adult RCF female mice.
In vivo
, VTA-specific pharmacological manipulation of the I
h
current reverted the pro-resilient phenotype in adult early-stressed mice or mimicked behavioral resilience in adult control animals.
This is the first evidence showing how pro-resilience behavior induced by early events is linked to a long-lasting reduction of I
h
current and excitability in VTA dopaminergic neurons.
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