The effects on the brain and social behavior might one day be reversible
Abused children often suffer from trauma throughout their adult lives. Patients that were exposed to trauma in early childhood can express their anxieties through drawings.
© MPI of Psychiatry
To the Point
- Risk factors: Early-life stressors such as childhood trauma, abuse, or neglect increase the likelihood of developing mental illness.
- Deficits in social behavior: Male mice exposed to stress early in life exhibited lower social status.
- Specific inhibitor: Inhibition of the stress-modulating protein FKBP51 completely prevented these social impairments.
- Prevention: FKBP51 is a promising pharmacological target for preventing the long-term effects of early trauma on brain function.
The study, co-led by Mathias Schmidt from the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry in Munich and Juan Pablo Lopez from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden, focused on the FKBP5 gene and its encoded protein, FKBP51, a well-established regulator of the body's stress hormone system and heavily implicated in psychiatric vulnerability.
Reversing social subordination with SAFit2
To investigate the effects of early trauma on social dynamics, the researchers used a mouse model of early life adversity combined with a computer vision-based tracking system called the Social Box. This semi-naturalistic living environment allowed for high-resolution, continuous analysis of complex social interactions within a group context.
The scientists discovered that male mice exposed to early adversity developed profound, persistent deficits in social behavior, manifesting as social subordination during both adolescence and adulthood: These stressed mice were disproportionately pushed into the lowest social ranks. Strikingly, when the researchers administered SAFit2 - a highly selective, brain-penetrant FKBP51 inhibitor - during the early adversity period, these behavioral impairments were completely prevented. The treated mice successfully developed normal social hierarchy dynamics, showing no difference from non-stressed controls.
Normalizing the brain's transcriptional landscape
To unravel how this treatment is mirrored at the cellular level, the team performed RNA sequencing across six stress-relevant brain regions, including the medial prefrontal cortex, nucleus accumbens, and basolateral amygdala. The analysis revealed that while early life adversity leaves a widespread imprint on the adult brain, SAFit2 treatment effectively normalized these gene expression changes. The most pronounced molecular rescue occurred within the medial prefrontal cortex and the nucleus accumbens, brain hubs crucial for top-down emotional control and reward sensitivity.
"By combining deep behavioral phenotyping and computer vision, we were able to break social impairments down into discrete, quantifiable components within a group setting," say Joeri Bordes from the The effects on the brain might one day be reversible and Xiuqi Ji from Karolinska Institutet, co-first authors of the study. "Observing that a temporary, early-life pharmacological intervention can preserve normal social behavior and interactions is incredibly encouraging."
"Our findings establish FKBP51 as a critical pharmacological target for reversing the lasting impact of early trauma on brain function," Schmidt and Lopez explain. "While we cannot always prevent the occurrence of early life adversity itself, this work opens up a vital preventative window. It offers a clear path toward developing targeted, proactive treatments that stop stress from becoming permanently embedded as psychiatric disease risk."