Fragmented early-life experiences, aberrant circuit maturation, emotional vulnerabilities

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P50 · $2,931,489 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

This is a resubmitted renewal proposal for a Conte Center focused on the contribution of early-life experiences, especially unpredictable and fragmented maternal and environmental signals, to adolescent vulnerabilities and adult mental illness via mechanisms involving disruption of the maturation of cognitive and emotional brain circuits. Complex behaviors involve coordinated activities of brain circuits. During development, environment- derived sensory signals influence circuit maturation (e.g., visual, auditory) and may drive aberrant circuit maturation that can promote emotional and cognitive problems. Yet the nature of the signals that contribute to vulnerabilities to mental illness, and how they disrupt brain circuit maturation is unclear. Among environmental influences, early-life adversity is an established risk factor for mental illness, and aspects of adversity (e.g., maternal depression, poverty) explain a significant portion of mental problems later in life. Yet there are serious gaps in our ability to identify early vulnerability to mental illness. Here, we posit that unpredictable, fragmented sensory signals (FRAG) from the mother and environment constitute a previously unrecognized indicator of early-life adversity. This hypothesis originated from mechanistic animal studies where consistent, predictable patterns of maternal-derived signals promote resilience by modulating excitatory synapse number and function of specific cell populations. By contrast, FRAG promotes aberrant maturation of brain circuits involved in emotion and cognition, with commensurate behavioral deficits. During the original award we focused on several cognitive and emotional vulnerabilities and these remain outcomes in this proposal. Additionally, we identified anhedonia as a robust direct consequence of early-life FRAG in experimental systems, associated with evidence of aberrant pleasure / reward circuit maturation. Anhedonia, a dimensional (RDoC) entity linked to multiple mental disorders, is a recently-identified core feature of PTSD. We emphasize anhedonia in the proposed renewal because we find that it follows FRAG in children, adolescents and young adults and predicts risk for post-combat mental illness in a vulnerable population of Marines. Thus, supported by compelling recently-published and preliminary data and guided by the reviews of the original renewal proposal, we test the Center’s overarching hypothesis: It states that, in concert with established types of early-life adversity, fragmented and unpredictable maternal and environmental signals contribute to vulnerabilities to mental illness via mechanisms involving disruption of the maturation of cognitive and emotional brain circuits. The proposed Center will aim to: 1) Test the relative contribution of FRAG, along with other early-life risk factors, to mental health outcomes including anhedonia, considering sex and using tools enabling assessments across diverse cohorts. 2) Test the mechanis...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10379266
Project number
5P50MH096889-09
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA-IRVINE
Principal Investigator
Tallie Z. Baram
Activity code
P50
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$2,931,489
Award type
5
Project period
2013-06-17 → 2024-03-31