Iowa [US]: We've all experienced the paralysing effects of danger or threat at some point. Researchers from the University of Iowa have determined the origin of that response to a threat. According to a recent study, a neural circuit connecting two distinct brain regions controls how animals, including humans, respond to stressful situations. The scientists used experiments to demonstrate how rats reacted to threats either passively or actively, and they connected each response to a particular neural pathway in the brain.
In a different experiment, the researchers were successful in altering the neural circuit, causing rats to overcome what would have been a paralysing reaction to a threat and react aggressively instead. The neural circuit identified with stress response connects the caudal medial prefrontal cortex to the midbrain dorsolateral periaqueductal grey. Clinching the connection, and how it regulates stress, is important, due to the known physical- and mental health impacts of chronic stress.
"A lot of chronic stress diseases like depression and anxiety disorders are associated with what we call a passive coping behaviour," explains Jason Radley, associate professor in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences and the study's corresponding author. "We know that a lot of these conditions are caused by life stress. The simplest reason we're interested in this pathway is thinking about it as a circuit that can promote resilience against stress."
An important pathway controlling how animals react to stress is the caudal medial prefrontal cortex-midbrain dorsolateral periaqueductal grey, according to earlier studies. By deactivating the pathway and then observing how the rats reacted to a threat, Radley's team was able to demonstrate the pathway's significance.
Rats could react in one of two ways: One is acting passively, which essentially means they did not react to the danger. The other is actively displaying a variety of behaviours, such as burying the danger (in the experiments, a shock probe), standing on its hind legs, or looking for a way out. The scientists discovered that the rats responded passively, or without directly reacting to the threat when the stress neural circuit was deactivated. "That shows this pathway is necessary for active coping behaviour," Radley said.