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Issue 1032 coverBiobehavioral Stress Response: Protective and Damaging Effects Volume 1032 published December 2004
Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1032: 14–34 (2004). doi: 10.1196/annals.1314.003
Copyright © 2004 by the New York Academy of Sciences
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Articles by DE KLOET, E R.
Articles by DERIJK, R.
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Articles by DE KLOET, E R.
Articles by DERIJK, R.
Signaling Pathways in Brain Involved in Predisposition and Pathogenesis of Stress-Related Disease: Genetic and Kinetic Factors Affecting the MR/GR Balance

E RONALD DE KLOET AND ROEL DERIJK

Division of Medical Pharmacology, LACDR/LUMC, Leiden University Leiden, The Netherlands

Address for correspondence: E. Ronald de Kloet, Ph.D., Division of Medical Pharmacology, LACDR/LUMC, Leiden University, PO Box 9502, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands. Voice: +31-71-527.6210; fax: +31-71-527.4715. e.kloet{at}lacdr.leidenuniv.nl

Optimal regulation of the stress response is a prerequisite for adaptation, homeostasis, and health. There are two modes of operation in the stress response. First, an immediate response mode mediated by corticotrophin-releasing hormone-1 (CRH-1) receptors that organizes the behavioral, sympathetic, and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) response to a stressor. Second, a slower mode, which facilitates behavioral adaptation, promotes recovery, and reestablishes homeostasis. Corticosteroid hormones are implicated in both stress system modes. On the one hand, cortisol and corticosterone determine the threshold or sensitivity of the fast responding mode, whereas the very same hormones in high concentrations facilitate termination of the stress response. In the brain, these actions exerted by the corticosteroid hormones are mediated by two distinct nuclear receptor types, that is, mineralocorticoid receptors (MRs) and glucocorticoid receptors (GRs). Whereas MRs maintain neuronal homeostasis and limit the disturbance by stress, GRs help to recover after the challenge and to store the experience for coping with future encounters. Imbalance in MR/GR-mediated actions compromises homeostatic processes in these neurons, which is thought to underlie maladaptive behavior and HPA dysregulation that may lead to aberrant metabolism, impaired immune function, and altered cardiovascular control. The balance in MR/GR-mediated actions depends on bioavailability of corticosteroids, access to the receptors, the stoichiometry of co-regulators, and other proteins as well as genetic factors, among which single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of the GRs are extensively documented. Stress can bias the receptor signaling pathways, changing "good" corticosteroid actions into "bad" ones.

Key Words: stress • behavior • brain • corticosteroids • receptors • single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) • vulnerability genes




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