Astrocytic cannabinoid receptor 1 promotes resilience by dampening stress-induced blood–brain barrier alterations

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Dudek, Katarzyna A. and Paton, Sam E. J. and Binder, Luisa Bandeira and Collignon, Adeline and Dion-Albert, Laurence and Cadoret, Alice and Lebel, Manon and Lavoie, Olivier and Bouchard, Jonathan and Kaufmann, Fernanda Neutzling and Clavet-Fournier, Valerie and Manca, Claudia and Guzmán, Manuel and Campbell, Matthew and Turecki, Gustavo and Mechawar, Naguib and Flamand, Nicolas and Lavoie-Cardinal, Flavie and Silvestri, Cristoforo and Di Marzo, Vincenzo and Menard, Caroline, Astrocytic cannabinoid receptor 1 promotes resilience by dampening stress-induced blood–brain barrier alterations, Nature Neuroscience, 28, 4, 2025, 766 – 782

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Blood–brain barrier (BBB) alterations contribute to stress vulnerability and the development of depressive behaviors. In contrast, neurovascular adaptations underlying stress resilience remain unclear. Here we report that high expression of astrocytic cannabinoid receptor 1 (CB1) in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) shell, particularly in the end-feet ensheathing blood vessels, is associated with resilience during chronic social stress in adult male mice. Viral-mediated overexpression of Cnr1 in astrocytes of the NAc shell results in baseline anxiolytic effects and dampens stress-induced anxiety- and depression-like behaviors in male mice. It promotes the expression of vascular-related genes and reduces astrocyte inflammatory response and morphological changes following an immune challenge with the cytokine interleukin-6, linked to stress susceptibility and mood disorders. Physical exercise and antidepressant treatment increase the expression of astrocytic Cnr1 in the perivascular region in male mice. In human tissue from male donors with major depressive disorder, we observe loss of CNR1 in the NAc astrocytes. Our findings suggest a role for the astrocytic endocannabinoid system in stress responses via modulation of the BBB.

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Cited by: 8; All Open Access, Green Open Access, Hybrid Gold Open Access

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Sponsor: Science Foundation Ireland
Grant Number: 16/RC/3948

Type of material: Journal Article