Ever wondered why stressed people are often grumpy, distracted or forgetful? An enzyme may be responsible!
Researchers from the Brain Mind Institute (BMI) at Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland have found a fundamental synaptic mechanism that explains the relationship between chronic stress and the loss of social skills and cognitive impairment.
When triggered by stress, an enzyme attacks a synaptic regulatory molecule in the brain, researchers found.
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They were interested in a molecule, the nectin-3 cell adhesion protein, whose role is to ensure adherence, at the synaptic level, between two neurons.
Positioned in the postsynaptic part, these proteins bind to the molecules of the presynaptic portion, thus ensuring the synaptic function.
However, the researchers found that on rat models affected by chronic stress, nectin-3 molecules were significantly reduced in number.
The investigations conducted by the researchers led them to an enzyme involved in the process of protein degradation: MMP-9.
It was already known that chronic stress causes a massive release of glutamate, a molecule that acts on NMDA receptors, which are essential for synaptic plasticity and thus for memory.
What these researchers found now is that these receptors activated the MMP-9 enzymes which, like scissors, literally cut the nectin-3 cell adhesion proteins.
When this happens, nectin-3 becomes unable to perform its role as a modulator of synaptic plasticity, researchers said.
In turn, these effects lead subjects to lose their sociability, avoid interactions with their peers and have impaired memory or understanding.
The researchers, in conjunction with Polish neuroscientists, were able to confirm this mechanism in rodents both in vitro and in vivo.
By means of external treatments that either activated nectin-3 or inhibited MMP-9, this showed that stressed subjects could regain their sociability and normal cognitive skills.
"The identification of this mechanism is important because it suggests potential treatments for neuropsychiatric disorders related to chronic stress, particularly depression," said Carmen Sandi, BMI's director.
The study was published in the journal Nature Communications.