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Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience logoLink to Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience
. 2016 Dec;18(4):403–413. doi: 10.31887/DCNS.2016.18.4/kressler

Stress-related disorders, pituitary adenylate cyclase—activating peptide (PACAP)ergic system, and sex differences

Trastornos relacionados con el estrés, sistema peptidérgico activador de la adenilato ciclasa hipofisiaria (PAACH) y diferencias por sexo

Troubles liés au stress, système PACAPergique (pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide) et différences selon le sexe

Teniel S Ramikie 1, Kerry J Ressler 2,*
PMCID: PMC5286726  PMID: 28179812

Abstract

Trauma-related disorders, such as posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are remarkably common and debilitating, and are often characterized by dysregulated threat responses. Across numerous epidemiological studies, females have been found to have an approximately twofold increased risk for PTSD and other stress-related disorders. Understanding the biological mechanisms of this differential risk is of critical importance. Recent data suggest that the pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) pathway is a critical regulator of the stress response across species. Moreover, increasing evidence suggests that this pathway is regulated by both stress and estrogen modulation and may provide an important window into understanding mechanisms of sex differences in the stress response. We have recently shown that PACAP and its receptor (PAC1R) are critical mediators of abnormal processes after psychological trauma. Notably, in heavily traumatized human subjects, there appears to be a robust sex-specific association of PACAP blood levels and PAC1R gene variants with fear physiology, PTSD diagnosis, and symptoms, specifically in females. The sex-specific association occurs within a single-nucleotide polymorphism (rs2267735) that resides in a putative estrogen response element involved in PAC1R gene regulation. Complementing these human data, the PAC1R messenger RNA is induced with fear conditioning or estrogen replacement in rodent models. These data suggest that perturbations in the PACAP-PAC1R pathway are regulated by estrogen and are involved in abnormal fear responses underlying PTSD.

Keywords: ADCYAP1, ADCYAP1R1, amygdala, anxiety, estrogen, fear, fear conditioning, genetic, PACAP, PTSD, sex difference, threat

Introduction

Of the trauma-and stress-related disorders, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is the most prevalent and well-understood. It is triggered by exposure to acute or reccurring traumatic events and characterized by four distinct symptom clusters: intrusive re-experiencing, avoidance, hyperarousal, as well as negative cognitions and mood (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th edition [DSM-5]). Accordingly, the major features of PTSD reflect deficits in stress-and fear memory-related mechanisms. In comparison with other trauma-related disorders, the epidemiological patterns of PTSD are fascinating—60% to 90% of Americans are exposed to PTSD risk factors, yet PTSD only manifests in 8% to 12% of the general population.1 Given the low disease penetrance, despite frequent exposure to environmental risk factors, it is both surprising and alarming that adult females exhibit a twofold higher lifetime prevalence of PTSD and greater symptom severity than males and prepubescent females.2-5 This incongruity within PTSD's broader disease profile highlights the following: interindividual variability significantly negotiates PTSD risk, and one such variability, sex, differentially influences PTSD susceptibility, potentially via sex-dependent risk factors.6,7

Many studies suggest that complex interactions between biological and environmental risk factors generate changes within neural substrates that regulate biological responsivity to trauma exposure.6 These intermediate phenotypes, in turn, promote maladaptive behavioral changes that manifest as PTSD-associated symptom clusters. Until recently, an overreliance on male cohorts in preclinical and clinical investigations has limited the field's understanding of how biological and environmental risk factors shape PTSD vulnerability in a sex-dependent manner. However, a recent convergence of studies implicates the pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP)ergic system, a fear- and stress-regulating biological system, in shaping sex-dependent PTSD risk. These studies have provided insights into sex-specific biological and environmental sculptors of PTSD susceptibility, as well as predictive PTSD biomarkers that may be potentially used to more effectively diagnose and treat female PTSD patients. Below, we will examine the intersection between sex-specific PTSD risk factors and the PACAPergic system to determine how the two collaborate to differentially shape PTSD susceptibility in females. In doing so, we will demonstrate the interconnectivity of biological and environmental risk factors and how this intersection influences sex-specific PTSD etiology and symptomatology.8

Introduction to the PACAPergic system

The PACAPergic system is a highly conserved biological system comprised of several polypeptides of varying sizes, owing to posttranslational proteolytic processing of the PACAP precursor protein that is encoded by the adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide 1 gene (ADCYAP1). 9,10 Two polypeptides, a 27- and a 38-aminoacid peptide (PACAP27 and PACAP38, respectively), are the most abundantly expressed and biologically active in central nervous system and peripheral tissues, with PACAP38 being tenfold to 100-fold more abundant than PACAP27.11 Subsequent to the isolation of PACAP, its three cognate receptors were identified and found to be highly expressed in the periphery and the brain.12 Of the three receptors, only the PACAP type 1 receptor (PAC1R) selectively binds PACAP27 and PACAP38 with high affinity.13

The PAC1R is a G-protein coupled receptor which, upon PACAP binding, recruits either Gαs and/or Gαq - coupled second-messenger pathways.10,14 Alternative splice events in the N-terminal and third intracellular loop of the PAC1R transcript diversify PAC1R properties, such as ligand affinity and coupling to second-messenger pathways in the central nervous system.15,16 These diverse second-messenger pathways engage intracellular downstream effectors with pleiotropic consequences, such as activity-dependent structural and functional plasticity within neuroendocrine circuits that control stress and fear processes.14,17-19 Supportive of this are early examinations of rodent PACAP38 and PAC1R transcript and protein expression patterns which show both being highly expressed within brain regions known to subserve stress and fear processes.11

Estrogenic regulation of the PACAPergic system

It is also important to note that ADCYAP1R1 (the PAC1R gene) contains several predicted estrogen response elements (EREs).20 EREs are consensus sequences within the promoter region of target genes to which activated estrogen receptors directly bind to regulate gene transcription.21-23 This is important to note because levels of estradiol, one of the predominant gonadal hormones in adult females, vacillate across the female reproductive cycle. Thus, in sexually mature females, PAC1R expression and PAC1R-associated functions are potentially regulated in an estrogen-dependent manner. Indeed, long-term estradiol treatment of ovariectomized female rats, via continuous release estrogen pellets, has been shown to increase ADCYAP1R1 and ADCYAP1 transcript expression within the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST).20 In part, these results parallel earlier studies showing that brain ADCYAP1 transcript levels vary across the rat estrous cycle with the greatest change occurring during proestrus24—a period characterized by peak gonadal hormones, including estradiol.25 Overall, these data suggest that the expression of PACAP-PAC1Rs is dynamically regulated by cycling levels of estradiol, and this dependency may confer sex-specific PACAP-PAC1R functional consequences, particularly within neural circuits of fear and stress.

PACAP-PAC1R and the stress response

Collectively, rodent studies indicate that the PACAP-ergic system is a master regulator of both central and peripheral stress responses after threat exposure.26 Anatomically, PACAP and PAC1R immunoreactive cells are present within stress-regulating brain regions.27-29 Furthermore, the functional consequences of this expression pattern is notable after chronic stress exposure, which results in elevated PACAP and PAC1R transcript expression in these brain regions.30 Similarly, other studies demonstrate that increasing central PACAP levels, via intracerebroventricular injections in behaviorally naive rats, enhance physiological hallmarks of stress, such as increased glucocorticoid release31 and sympathetic activation.32,33 Parallel to these results, global loss of the PACAP or PAC1Rs attenuates normal molecular, physiological, and behavioral consequences of environmental stressors,34 whereas manipulations of PACAP levels or PAC1R activity, specifically within stress-responsive brain regions, are accompanied by enhancement of stress-related behavioral phenotypes, such as startle responses27,30 and anxiety-like behaviors.27,33,35,36 These data not only support the role of the PACAPergic system in stress-response mechanisms, but also suggest that PACAP-PAC1R interactions are upstream of many well-known stress mediators. Altogether, these experiments demonstrate that PACAP-PAC1R functions, particularly within stress-regulating neural substrates, are principal facilitators of molecular, physiological, and behavioral consequences of stress exposure.36,37

Sex-dependency of PACAP-PAC1R regulation of stress responsivity

There are few studies that have examined whether PACAP-PAC1R regulation of the stress response exhibits sex dependency. Of those, there appears to be no influence of the primary gonadal hormone in females, estradiol, on PACAP recruitment of corticosterone. However, these experiments were carried out in ovariectomized rats38; therefore, additional studies, particularly in naturally cycling rodents, may offer greater translational insight into the relationship between sex and PACAP-PAC1R regulation of stress responsivity. The data discussed in the previous paragraph strongly argue that PACAP-PAC1R functions within stress-regulating brain regions—such as the amygdala, hippocampus, prefrontal cortex, and BNST39-41—play an important role in stress responsivity to environmental threats. Notably, these brain regions are sexually dimorphic, abnormal in PTSD cohorts, and under significant gonadal hormone control,42,43 implying that within the sex-dependent constraints of these stress-regulating circuits, PACAP-PAC1R actions, or lack thereof, may confer differential sex-dependent vulnerabilities to stress-related pathologies such as PTSD, as discussed further below.

Fear regulation as a biomarker of PTSD in humans

Patients with PTSD, as compared with trauma-exposed controls, also exhibit abnormally high conditioned fear responses,44-46 as well as deficits in fear inhibition47-49 and extinction.50 These pathological fear mechanisms are hypothesized to result from either one or a combination of the following dysregulated fear-memory processes: (i) an inability to habituate to aversive environmental stimuli; (ii) impaired capacity to inhibit or extinguish fear memory; and/or (iii) an overconsolidation of the initial fear memory. To examine these dysregulated fear mechanisms, Pavlovian fear conditioning and extinction or fear inhibition behavioral paradigms extremely valuable in dissecting the pathophysiology of PTSD in preclinical and clinical have been shown to be studies.51-53 More specifically, these paradigms permit the examination of species-specific indices of fear acquisition and inhibition long after the aversive stimuli is removed from the experimental environment.54 Altogether, these data argue in favor of experimental models of fear learning, extinction, and inhibition as useful models for understanding PTSD pathophysiology.

Fear-memory processes and the PACAPergic system

Consistent with PACAP-PAC1R expression within neural substrates of fear-memory, functional and behavioral analyses show that PACAP-PAC1R actions also play a role in fear-memory mechanisms. Whereas global PAC1R loss, in rodent models, does not lead to deficits in declarative memory or cued-fear memory retrieval, significant deficits in contextual fear memory are observed,55 thereby demonstrating that PAC1R signaling plays a critical role in hippocampal-dependent fear-memory circuits. Moreover, this deficiency in context-related associative learning is also accompanied by impaired long-term synaptic plasticity in the hippocampus55 —a relatively long-lasting functional change in synaptic strength that is thought to represent the cellular basis for fear-memory consolidation.56 Similarly, hippocampal- and amygdala-specific PAC1R pharmacological inhibition attenuate contextual fear-memory recall, albeit cued-fear-memory consolidation was not assessed in this study.57 These experimental results suggest that PACAP-PAC1R actions are enlisted, within neural substrates of the fear-memory circuit, to promote contextual fear-learning mechanisms. Supportive of this conclusion are classical fear-conditioning studies, where a previously neutral tone paired with a series of foot shocks increased both PACAP and PAC1R transcripts in the amygdala, BNST, and prefrontal cortex of mice.20 Furthermore, a positive correlation found between prefrontal cortex and amygdala PAC1R transcript levels and the degree of fear learning was also observed.20 Altogether, these data argue that PACAP-PAC1R actions are engaged within fear-learning neural circuits to promote fear-memory consolidation and retrieval. Given the evidence of PACAP-PAC1R function as central to fear and stress processes and the deterioration of these processes in PTSD symptomatology,58 the PACAP-PAC1R system has emerged as an attractive candidate in the examination of PTSD susceptibility.

Peripheral PACAP levels as a biomarker for sex-specific PTSD risk

As alluded to earlier, the hallmark features of PTSD symptom clusters are maladaptive stress responsivity and fear-memory processes after trauma exposure58 (DSM-5). It is, therefore, unsurprising that many stress-and fear-regulating neurobiological systems, such as the PACAPergic system, are dysregulated in PTSD patients. Interestingly, dysfunctions in the PACAP-PAC1R system appear to uniquely facilitate PTSD vulnerability in sexually mature females rather than males. Relatively recently, our lab found that peripheral PACAP38 levels were positively correlated with total PTSD symptoms, specifically in adult female PTSD cohorts, with no association between peripheral PACAP38 and PTSD symptoms found in male PTSD counterparts despite males also exhibiting similarly high blood PACAP38 levels.20 Furthermore, peripheral PACAP38 levels were also predictive of PTSD diagnosis specifically for female, but not male, PTSD cohorts. Although differently characterized in the DSM-IV and the DSM-5, the three primary symptom clusters of PTSD, ie, intrusive re-experiencing, avoidance, and hyperarousal, were also positively correlated with peripheral PACAP38 levels in females, with higher levels of PACAP38 predictive of these subscale symptoms specifically in female, but not male, PTSD cohorts.20 These associations were replicated in a similar sample of highly traumatized adult females and remained statistically significant even when controlling for age, total trauma exposure, and other disorders often comorbid with PTSD, such as depression and substance abuse.20 Furthermore, the association between peripheral PACAP38 levels and inhibition of conditioned fear was also examined. Females with elevated PACAP38 levels demonstrated impaired inhibition of conditioned fear, as exhibited by an inability to discriminate between the conditioned stimulus (danger cue) and unconditioned stimulus (safety cue).20 Overall, these data suggest that blood PACAP38 levels are associated with PTSD symptoms, specifically in female cohorts.

Sex-specific genetic risk for PTSD

The significant influence of genetic factors in PTSD susceptibility is evident in twin studies, which compellingly demonstrate that genetic factors account for 30% to 70% of PTSD risk.59 Intriguingly, this heritability of PTSD is higher in females than males6—evidence that indicates a higher contribution of heritability to PTSD vulnerability in females. Molecular studies have identified over 20 genetic polymorphisms that are more frequent in PTSD cohorts than controls (reviewed in Norrholm and Ressler60). However, until recently, none of the 20 PTSD-associated genetic polymorphisms were associated with female-specific PTSD risk, despite females exhibiting greater PTSD heritability. This has made it difficult to examine how genetic variability interacts with environmental risk factors to modulate sex-specific PTSD risk.

PAC1R genetic variability as biomarker for female-specific PTSD risk

Taking into consideration the greater degree of heritability in PTSD vulnerability and the correlation between peripheral PACAP38 levels and PTSD symptomatology specifically in female PTSD cohorts, genetic polymorphisms in the PACAP and PAC1R loci (ADCYAP1 and ADCYAP1R1, respectively) were assessed to determine whether PACAP-PAC1R genetic variability is associated with PTSD diagnosis and symptoms, as well as physiological and psychological intermediate phenotypes in highly traumatized civilians. Using a tag-single-nucleotide-polymorphism (tag-SNP) approach, investigators examined 44 SNPs in ADCYAP1 and ADCYAP1R1. However, only one SNR rs2267735 in ADCYAP1R1 was found to be significantly associated with PTSD diagnosis specifically in female, but not male, PTSD subjects, including an additional cohort that served as replication source.20 Although genetic variations in and around ADCYAP1R1 are implicated in other mental disorders, such as major depression and schizophrenia,61,62 this rs2267735 polymorphism was not associated with these and other severe psychiatric disorders, such as bipolar disorder and Alzheimer disease,20 implying that rs2267735 may be specifically predictive of PTSD diagnosis in adult females.

We also explored whether the ADCYAP1R1 risk genotype was also predictive of PTSD symptomatology in a sex-specific manner. Moreover, analyses of the relationship between the ADCYAP1R1 risk allele and PTSD symptoms revealed a replicable, dose-dependent relationship between the risk allele and total PTSD symptoms, with female “CC” carriers demonstrating greater PTSD symptoms than “CG” or “GG” carriers.20 Additional analyses revealed that physiological measures of stress and fear are also differentially associated with the ADCYAP1R1 SNR Even after controlling for trauma, age, and race, the ADCYAP1R “CC” genotype was strongly associated with higher levels of hyperarousal symptoms than those observed in “CG” or “GG” female carriers.20 Furthermore, when we assessed physiological measures of fear, using fear-potentiated startle and dark-enhanced startle, female carriers of the “CC” genotype had impaired startle discrimination and enhanced fear responsivity, respectively, as compared with “CG” or “GG” female carriers. Intriguingly, both measures of fear responsivity are consistently impaired in PTSD cohorts.63,64

In further support of its contributions to sex-specific PTSD risk, rs2267735 was also located within a predicted ERE of the ADCYAP1R1 locus. Given the estrogen-dependency of ADCYAP1R1 transcript expression20 and evidence of estradiol-ERE interactions in gene-expression regulation,21,22,65 we utilized a previously analyzed data set, with combined brain messenger RNA (mRNA) expression and genome-wide association data, to examine the functional implications of ADCY AP1R1 rs2267735 on central PAC1R transcript expression. Overall, these data show that females carrying the ADCYAP1R1 rs2267735 risk genotype (“CC”) expressed significantly less cortical ADCYAP1R1 mRNA than male “CC” carriers or females that did not carry the risk allele.20 Although additional studies are warranted, these results suggest that the “CC” risk allele potentially impairs estrogen-dependent ADCYAP1R1 transcript expression, thus resulting in lower AD CYAP1R1 mRNA levels. Intriguingly, the sex-dependency of the ADCY-AP1R1 risk genotype does not manifest until puberty, consistent with a role for cycling estrogen in its regulation.66 Indeed, the fear67 stress-regulating68 and anxiolytic69,70 roles of testosterone may, in part, explain why the “CC” risk allele, though associated with pathological threat responsivity in both prepubescent males and females, is no longer predictive of PTSD diagnosis and physiological fear responses in postpubescent males.20 Though additional studies are needed, these collective data suggest that impaired estradiol-ERE interactions, as a result of the “CC” risk allele, may act as one of the mechanisms through which sexually mature females gain greater PTSD vulnerability.

Neuroimaging profiles as intermediate phenotypes of sex-specific PTSD risk

As alluded to earlier, PTSD-implicated stress- and fear-neural circuits are also sexually dimorphic. For example, healthy males and females exhibit a number of sex differences in region-specific sizes and differential neural activation patterns during fear-learning tasks53,71,72 and after exposure to stressors.73 Interestingly, sex differences in PTSD diagnosis, symptom duration, symptom severity, and functional impairment emerge after adolescence, a period characterized by striking changes in cycling levels of gonadal hormones.74,75 The coincidental emergence of differential PTSD vulnerability alongside the onset of gonadal hormone cyclicity52,72 suggests that activational effects of gonadal hormones, within the confines of sexually dimorphic stress- and fear-neural circuits, lead to sex-dependent differences in trauma responsivity.

In light of this, it is also important to investigate intermediate phenotypes related to the ADCYAP1R1 SNP to further understand why this risk allele, in females, is predictive of exaggerated arousal responses characteristic of PTSD psychophysiology. To do this, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) analyses in a sample of adult females who carried or lacked the risk allele and who have experienced a moderate to high level of civilian trauma76 in order to assess the consequence of the ADCYAP1R1 risk allele on amygdala and hippocampal activation, as well as the functional connectivity between the two. These brain regions were chosen as they are often implicated in PTSD pathophysiology77; furthermore, it is also known that PACAP and PAC1Rs exhibit high density12,28 and facilitate synaptic plasticity,78,79 as well as additional biological functions within these brain regions.80

This study found that in response to unconditioned fearful-face stimuli, females with “CC” risk alleles, as compared with females with the “GC” or “GG” nonrisk alleles, demonstrate increased activation of both the amygdala and hippocampus, as well as reduced functional connectivity between the two (Figure 1). 76 These data are consistent with previous studies that show greater fear responsivity (ie, dark-enhanced startle) in females with the ADCYAP1R1 “CC” genotype than in “GC” or “CC” carriers.20 Furthermore, these activational changes within fear-regulating neural circuits are characteristic of neurobiological profiles of PTSD,81,82 suggesting that the ADCYAP1R1 “CC” risk allele increases the PTSD vulnerability profile of female carriers by dysregulating neural circuits that subserve unconditioned fear responsivity.

Figure 1. The ADCYAP1R1 risk allele (rs2267735) is associated with increased amygdala activation (A) and decreased amygdala-hippocampal connectivity (B) in traumatized women when viewing fearful faces (N=49). Adapted from reference 76: Stevens JS, Almli LM, Fani N, et al. PACAP receptor gene polymorphism impacts fear responses in the amygdala and hippocampus. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014;111(8):3158-3163. Copyright© National Academy of Science 2014.

Figure 1.

In comparison with unconditioned fear responses, fMRI studies revealed that contextual, but not cued, fear conditioning resulted in a gene-dose-dependent decrease in hippocampal activation in female carriers of the “C” PTSD risk allele during the late acquisition of contextual fear, with no differences found during habituation, early acquisition, or extinction.83 Interestingly, these data parallel deficits in contextual, but not cued, fear learning found in mice with global PAC1R loss84 and suggest that decreased ADCYAP1R1 mRNA expression, associated with the female-specific risk genotype,20 attenuates hippocampal activation and, by extension, impairs contextual processing during fear learning. Indeed, PTSD cohorts exhibit impaired hippocampaldependent contextual fear conditioning.85 Collectively, this work demonstrates genetic penetrance of the ADCYAP1R1 risk allele at the level of PTSD-implicated neural circuits which, in turn, manifest as intermediate phenotypes of the ADCYAP1R1 risk allele during unconditioned and conditioned fear.

Interactions between genetic and environmental risk factors in sex-specific PTSD risk

Twin studies provide compelling evidence that although genetic factors account for 30% to 70% of PTSD risk, the remaining variance in PTSD vulnerability is accounted for by individual-specific environmental exposure.86 This level of specificity implies that trauma characteristics play an important role in shaping individual PTSD risk.7 Experience of trauma, defined by the DSM-5 as having “experienced, witnessed, or [been] confronted with an event or events that involved actual or threatened death or serious injury, or a threat to the physical integrity of the self or others,” can be segregated into two broad categories. The first is systemic/neurogenic, which represents a homeostatic challenge or a physical stimulus that is recognized by somatic, visceral, or circumventricular sensory pathways and requires an immediate “systemic” reaction that is triggered by reflexive mechanisms.87 The second category is processive, which is of psychological origin and which recruits brain regions involved in higher-order processing/decision making and represents responses mounted in anticipation of, rather than in reaction to, a homeostatic threat. This type of trauma is influenced by previous experiences (eg, associative learning) or species-specific predispositions (eg, the aversion to snakes in humans) and allows the organism to detect novel stimuli that predict sources of harm.88 When activated by environmental threat, psychological trauma engages mediators in the corticolimbic circuitry that subserve decision making, learning, and memory, as well as emotionality. However, it is important to note that though both types of trauma theoretically recruit distinct neural circuits, at times, trauma types are not entirely separable, as physical stressors may, to varying degrees, have psychosocial facets and vice versa.89 Nonetheless, these distinct differences in trauma features may confer differential interactions between environmental and genetic risk factors and, as a result, confer differential PTSD vulnerabilities.

Though the effects of trauma characteristics on sex-specific PTSD risk are not as clear, differences in PTSD vulnerability may, partly, be due to differences in specific trauma types to which each sex is exposed.74,90 Indeed, females experience higher rates of sexual trauma91 than males, who in general experience higher rates of trauma,92 as well as higher rates of nonsexual assaults and physical violence.93 Thus, it is possible that males and females engage different trauma-related neural processes more frequently.

PACAP signaling is required for biological responsivity to psychological trauma

Given that females have a higher exposure rate to psychological trauma and are predisposed to PACAP-PAC1R PTSD risk factors, it is also interesting to note that, in rodent models, the trauma type (psychological vs physical) also appears to differentially recruit the PACAPergic system. This is partly demonstrated in transgenic mice that globally lack PACAP protein (PACAP-knockout mice). PACAP-knockout mice, as compared with controls, demonstrate blunted hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis activation and impaired stress-coupled molecular activity after psychological stressors, such as restraint stress,34,94 light exposure after constant dark,95 or open field exposure.94 Contrarily, global loss of PACAP does not impair HPA activation, as measured by plasma corticosterone levels, after systemic/neurogenic stressors, such as immune, metabolic, or cold-exposure challenges.34,36,94 These data suggest that, unlike physical stressors, psychological stressors depend on PACAP signaling to recruit molecular and neuroendocrine processes. Though additional studies are needed, these data collectively indicate that the predominance of psychological stress exposure in female cohorts may lead to a greater dependence on PACAP-mediated biological responsivity in females than in males, after environmental trauma exposure. Thus, impairment of the PACAPergic system and, in turn, an inadequate stress response to environmental threats—a risk factor for PTSD96,97—will have greater pathological consequences for females.

There also appears to be a within-trauma-type effect of trauma persistence on PTSD vulnerability. In mice, the PACAP-dependence of HPA axis activation after psychological stressors is consistently greater for prolonged trauma than for acute psychological trauma.34 In support of this, associations between the ADCYAP1R1 rs2267735 risk allele and childhood maltreatment—one of the most robust environmental risk factors for PTSD among trauma-exposed adults98,99—were moderated by the number of exposures to childhood maltreatment (CM) in female PTSD, but not depression, cohorts.100 Moreover, CM-exposed females carrying one or more of the ADCYAP1R1 “C” alleles showed increased risk for PTSD, as well as greater PTSD severity.100 These data suggest a within-trauma-type effect of the PACAPergic system after psychological trauma.

Conclusions

The PACAP and PAC1R systems serve as a system-wide mediator of stress responses. Convergent animal and human data suggest a robust role for this system within neural nodes that regulate stress and fear processes elicited by trauma exposures. Furthermore, data from multiple sources now suggest a role for dysregulated PACAP-PAC1R in PTSD. Notably, in humans, this effect seems most robust in females and increasing data suggest that this is due to estrogenic regulation of the ADCYAP1R1 gene in combination with the sex-specific dominance of trauma type recruiting stress and fear processes (Figure 1A). There are also compelling data for significant interactions between the ADCYAP1R1 risk allele and persistence of childhood maltreatment in female PTSD cohorts. These data indicate that trauma amount differentially interacts with PAC1R genetic risk factors and may reflect a greater impact of PAC1R dysfunction under conditions where its recruitment is crucial for effective physiological and psychological responses to trauma. Much is yet to be learned about the role of sex biology, estrogen regulation, and PACAP-PAC1R functions, but these may make up one of the more robust “sex x environment interactions” models in understanding brain function related to sex, trauma, and PTSD.

Figure 2. Schematic illustrating the proposed relationship between pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP)-PAC1 receptor (PAC1R) signaling and fear/stress processes elicited by trauma exposure. (Left) The predominant gonadal hormone in females, estradiol (E,), and trauma both regulate the PACAP-PAC1R system in the female brain to drive normal fear and stress processes. (Right) Females, but not males, with high plasma PACAP38 levels and PAC1R polymorphisms may have altered PACAP-PAC1R signaling, which consequently drives pathological fear and stress processes associated with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This schematic diagram suggests that the responsiveness of the PACAP-PAC1R system to E, might be important in regulating PACAP-PAC1R activation of fearand stress-dependent pathways and phenotypes that underlie the sex-bias in PTSD prevalence. ERE, estrogen responsive element; E2, estradiol; Trauma, psychological trauma; PACAP, pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide .

Figure 2.

Acknowledgments

Research in the author's laboratories is supported by funds from R01 MH096764 and R01 MH108665. The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose.

Contributor Information

Teniel S. Ramikie, Department of Psychiatry, McClean Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Belmont, Massachusetts, USA.

Kerry J. Ressler, Department of Psychiatry, McClean Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Belmont, Massachusetts, USA.

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