PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Rachel-Karson Thériault AU - Joshua D. Manduca AU - Melissa L. Perreault TI - Sex differences in innate and adaptive neural oscillatory patterns link resilience and susceptibility to chronic stress in rats AID - 10.1503/jpn.200117 DP - 2021 Mar 01 TA - Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience PG - E258--E270 VI - 46 IP - 2 4099 - http://jpn.ca/content/46/2/E258.short 4100 - http://jpn.ca/content/46/2/E258.full SO - JPN2021 Mar 01; 46 AB - Background Major depressive disorder is a chronic illness with a higher incidence in women. Dysregulated neural oscillatory activity is an emerging mechanism thought to underlie major depressive disorder, but whether sex differences in these rhythms contribute to the development of symptoms is unknown.Methods We exposed male and female rats to chronic unpredictable stress and characterized them as stress-resilient or stress-susceptible based on behavioural output in the forced swim test and the sucrose preference test. To identify sex-specific neural oscillatory patterns associated with stress response, we recorded local field potentials from the prefrontal cortex, cingulate cortex, nucleus accumbens and dorsal hippocampus throughout stress exposure.Results At baseline, female stress-resilient rats innately exhibited higher theta coherence in hippocampal connections compared with stress-susceptible female rats. Following stress exposure, additional oscillatory changes manifested: stress-resilient females were characterized by increased dorsal hippocampal theta power and cortical gamma power, and stress-resilient males were characterized by a widespread increase in high gamma coherence. In stress-susceptible animals, we observed a pattern of increased delta and reduced theta power; the changes were restricted to the cingulate cortex and dorsal hippocampus in males but occurred globally in females. Finally, stress exposure was accompanied by the time-dependent recruitment of specific neural pathways, which culminated in system-wide changes that temporally coincided with the onset of depression-like behaviour.Limitations We could not establish causality between the electrophysiological changes and behaviours with the methodology we employed.Conclusion Sex-specific neurophysiological patterns can function as early markers for stress vulnerability and the onset of depression-like behaviours in rats.