1. Academic Validation
  2. CRF-R1 Antagonist Treatment Exacerbates Circadian Corticosterone Secretion under Chronic Stress, but Preserves HPA Feedback Sensitivity

CRF-R1 Antagonist Treatment Exacerbates Circadian Corticosterone Secretion under Chronic Stress, but Preserves HPA Feedback Sensitivity

  • Pharmaceutics. 2021 Dec 8;13(12):2114. doi: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13122114.
Yadira Ibarguen-Vargas 1 2 Samuel Leman 1 Rupert Palme 3 Catherine Belzung 1 Alexandre Surget 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 UMR1253, iBrain, Université de Tours, Inserm, 37200 Tours, France.
  • 2 EUK-CVL, Université d'Orléans, 45100 Orléans, France.
  • 3 Department of Biomedical Sciences/Biochemistry, University of Veterinary Medicine, 1210 Vienna, Austria.
Abstract

Despite promising initial reports, corticotropin-releasing factor receptor type-1 (CRF-R1) antagonists have mostly failed to display efficacy in clinical trials for anxiety or depression. Rather than broad-spectrum antidepressant/anxiolytic-like drugs, they may represent an 'antistress' solution for single stressful situations or for patients with chronic stress conditions. However, the impact of prolonged CRF-R1 antagonist treatments on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis under chronic stress conditions remained to be characterized. Hence, our study investigated whether a chronic CRF-R1 antagonist (crinecerfont, formerly known as SSR125543, 20 mg·kg-1·day-1 IP, 5 weeks) would alter HPA axis basal circadian activity and negative feedback sensitivity in mice exposed to either control or chronic stress conditions (unpredictable chronic mild stress, UCMS, 7 weeks), through measures of fecal corticosterone metabolites, plasma corticosterone, and dexamethasone suppression test. Despite preserving HPA axis parameters in control non-stressed mice, the 5-week crinercerfont treatment improved the negative feedback sensitivity in chronically stressed mice, but paradoxically exacerbated their basal corticosterone secretion nearly all along the circadian cycle. The capacity of chronic CRF-R1 antagonists to improve the HPA negative feedback in UCMS argues in favor of a potential therapeutic benefit against stress-related conditions. However, the treatment-related overactivation of HPA circadian activity in UCMS raise questions about possible physiological outcomes with long-standing treatments under ongoing chronic stress.

Keywords

CRF; CRF receptor type 1 antagonist; HPA axis; antidepressant; anxiety; chronic stress; depression; glucocorticoids.

Figures
Products