| Literature DB >> 30819248 |
Rachel-Karson Thériault1,2, Melissa L Perreault3,4.
Abstract
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a debilitating chronic illness that is two times more prevalent in women than in men. The mechanisms associated with the increased female susceptibility to depression remain poorly characterized. Aberrant neuronal oscillatory activity within the putative depression network is an emerging mechanism underlying MDD. However, innate sex differences in network activity and its contribution to depression vulnerability have not been well described. In this review, current evidence of sex differences in neuronal oscillatory activity, including the influence of sex hormones and female cycling, will first be described followed by evidence of disrupted neuronal circuit function in MDD and the effects of antidepressant treatment. Lastly, current knowledge of sex differences in MDD-associated aberrant circuit function and oscillatory activity will be highlighted, with an emphasis on the role of sex steroids and female cycling. Collectively, it is clear that there are significant gaps in the literature regarding innate and pathologically associated sex differences in network activity and that the elucidation of these differences is invaluable to our understanding of sex-specific vulnerabilities and therapies for MDD.Entities:
Keywords: Depression; Female cycling; Network function; Neuronal oscillations; Sex; Sex hormones
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30819248 PMCID: PMC6394099 DOI: 10.1186/s13293-019-0226-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Sex Differ ISSN: 2042-6410 Impact factor: 5.027
Sex differences in circuit function and the influence of sex hormones
| Study | Species | Major findings |
|---|---|---|
| Beaumont et al. [ | Adult humans | Women had less power asymmetry between hemispheres during spatial and verbal tasks, a lower degree of cortical specialization of functions, and larger interhemispheric coherence, compared to men. |
| Corsi-Cabrera et al. [ | Adult humans | Men had a negative correlation between interhemispheric coherence and an aptitude test score for verbal, spatial, and abstract reasoning, while women had a positive correlation. |
| Corsi-Cabrera et al. [ | Adult humans | Women had greater interparietal coherence across all frequency bands and higher global alpha relative power, while men had higher global beta relative power and greater beta relative power in the left over the right parietal region. |
| Juarez and Corsi-Cabrera [ | Adult Wistar rats | Interhemispheric theta coherence and global theta relative power were greater in males. Males showed greater interhemispheric delta and alpha coherences, while females had greater global delta and beta relative power. |
| Juarez et al. [ | Adult Wistar rats | Males had greater cortical asymmetry and higher right over left parietal coupling than females. Interhemispheric coherence in delta and theta bands was greater in males. Females had a greater global delta and beta relative power and a lower global theta relative power, compared to males. |
| Corsi-Cabrera et al. [ | Adult Wistar rats pre- or postnatally virilized | Postnatally GNX males had increased global beta relative power. Prenatal TP treatment abolished sex differences and increased the absolute power of all frequency bands, except beta, in both sexes, as well as enhanced theta absolute power, reduced beta relative power, and increased interparietal coherence in females. Postnatal TP treatment increased beta power and decreased interparietal coherence in females. |
| Del Rio-Portilla et al. [ | Adult GNX Wistar rats | GNX abolished baseline sex differences and induced higher overall absolute power in males than females. Hormonal treatment re-established the interparietal asymmetry in both sexes and the lack of sex differences in absolute power. Hormonal treatment did not re-establish sex differences in interhemispheric coherence or relative delta and theta power. |
| Fernandez-Guasti et al. [ | Adult intact or neonatally virilized Wistar rats | Progesterone increased absolute alpha and beta powers and the interparietal alpha correlation in both intact and virilized males. Progesterone reduced the interparietal theta and alpha correlations in both intact and virilized females. |
GNX gonadectomized
Aberrant oscillatory activity in human patients with MDD
| Frequency band | Reported changes in MDD patients |
|---|---|
| Delta | Reduced global power [ |
| Theta | Reduced power in the occipito-parietal region [ |
| Alpha | Increased global power [ |
| Beta | Dominant global power [ |
| Gamma | Reduced power in the frontal and central regions [ |
The role of female sex hormones in MDD overall and in MDD circuit function
| Study | Subjects/treatment | Major findings |
|---|---|---|
| Rudolph et al. [ | Postmenopausal women with and without MDD | A clinically relevant reduction in depression severity |
| Marsh et al. [ | Regularly cycling premenopausal women | A longer use of OC (i.e., a longer exposure to estrogens from menarche to menopause) was associated with reduced risk of postmenopausal depression. |
| Saletu et al. [ | Menopausal women with and without MDD | Estradiol treatment increased alpha and theta power and reduced beta power in the temporal region, which reflected improved vigilance. No changes in frontal alpha asymmetry observed. |
| Zhang et al. [ | Regularly cycling women with and without MDD | The degree of frontal asymmetry positively correlated to depression severity scores during periovulation only. The level of frontal asymmetry during the premenstrual phase was predictive of postmenstrual depression severity scores. The degree of frontal asymmetry during postmenstrual and periovulation phases predicted depression severity scores during periovulation. |
| Saletu et al. [ | Postmenopausal women without previous HRT, with or without MDD | Frontal asymmetry positively correlates with depression severity scores. Postmenopausal women with depression had reduced global total and absolute power in delta, theta, and beta bands, as well as increased global relative delta and theta power, and attenuated alpha power. Both estradiol levels and depression severity scores directly correlated with EEG changes. |
HRT hormone replacement therapy, OC oral contraceptives