Brain Systems Underlying Susceptibility to Helplessness and Depression
- 1 September 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience Reviews
- Vol. 2 (3) , 198-221
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1534582303259057
Abstract
There has been a relative lack of research into the neurobiological predispositions that confer vulnerability to depression. This article reviews functional brain mappings from a genetic animal model, the congenitally helpless rat, which is predisposed to develop learned helplessness. Neurometabolic findings from this model are integrated with the neuroscientific literature from other animal models of depression as well as depressed humans. Changes in four major brain systems are suggested to underlie susceptibility to helplessness and possibly depression: (a) an unbalanced prefrontal-cingulate cortical system, (b) a dissociated hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, (c) a dissociated septal-hippocampal system, and (d) a hypoactive brain reward system, as exemplified by a hypermetabolic habenula-interpeduncular nucleus pathway and a hypometabolic ventral tegmental area-striatum pathway. Functional interconnections and causal relationships among these systems are considered and further experiments are suggested, with theoretical attention to how an abnormality in any one system could affect the others.Keywords
This publication has 213 references indexed in Scilit:
- Early Stress and Genetic Influences on Hypothalamic–Pituitary–Adrenal Axis Functioning in AdulthoodHormones and Behavior, 1999
- Stimulation of the lateral septum attenuates immobilization-induced stress ulcersPhysiology & Behavior, 1996
- Pattern of activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in acute stroke. Relation to acute confusional state, extent of brain damage, and clinical outcome.Stroke, 1994
- Withdrawal following cocaine self‐administration decreases regional cerebral metabolic rate in critical brain reward regionsSynapse, 1993
- Relevance of the Habenular Complex to Neuropsychiatry: A Review and HypothesisInternational Journal of Neuroscience, 1991
- Cells of the rat lateral habenula respond to high-threshold somatosensory inputsNeuroscience Letters, 1989
- Presynaptic effects of glucocorticoids on dopaminergic and cholinergic synaptosomes. Implications for rapid endocrine-neural interactions in stressLife Sciences, 1987
- Form and distribution of neurons in rat cingulate cortex: Areas 32, 24, and 29Journal of Comparative Neurology, 1981
- Escape deficits induced by uncontrollable stress: Antagonism by dopamine and norepinephrine agonistsBehavioral and Neural Biology, 1980
- Fornix transection blocks “learned helplessness” in ratsBehavioral and Neural Biology, 1979