The vulnerability to stress and mood disorders is thought to have a developmental origin.
Converging evidence indicates that prefrontal cortex (PFC) circuits engaged in cortico-limbic
top-down control are key in the developmental etiology of mood disorders. The neural circuit
connecting the PFC to the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) is critically involved in stress-coping
responses and mood control, and represents the main source of brain serotonin (5-HT).
During mouse development there is a critical period [postnatal days (P) 2 to 14] when
environmental factors can influence neurodevelopmental trajectories with long-lasting
consequences for adult life. The early-life stress of maternal separation (MS) is a validated
model that causes adult emotional alterations. We investigate how the early PFC-to-DRN
circuit is formed and refined, and how dysregulation of its neurodevelopment is affected in
the MS model. We evaluated alterations in the synaptic connectivity of the PFC-to-DRN
circuit using the high-resolution microscopy technique Array Tomography and the activation
of DRN 5-HT neurons was assessed by cFos immunostaining. To investigate possible
physiological correlates accompanying morphological changes we performed ex-vivo patch
clamp recordings on both 5-HT and GABA DRN neurons of MS mice at these different
developmental ages. Our work indicates that maternally-separated mice have alterations in
the PFC-to-DRN circuit and 5HT neuron stress-dependent activation.