ePoster

SEX-DEPENDENT EFFECTS OF ADOLESCENT CHRONIC STRESS ON COGNITIVE BIAS AND FUNCTIONAL CONNECTOME IN EMERGING ADULTHOOD

Twain Daiand 4 co-authors

The University of Western Australia

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS07-10AM-256

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS07-10AM-256

Poster preview

SEX-DEPENDENT EFFECTS OF ADOLESCENT CHRONIC STRESS ON COGNITIVE BIAS AND FUNCTIONAL CONNECTOME IN EMERGING ADULTHOOD poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS07-10AM-256

Abstract

Negative cognitive biases in depression are more pronounced in females than in males. This sex difference emerges during adolescence, a sensitive developmental stage when chronic stress increases the risk of depression in adulthood. The neurobiology linking adolescent stress to sex‑specific cognitive bias and resting‑state network reorganization in adults remain poorly understood. The study aimed to investigate the longitudinal effects of chronic restraint stress (CRS) during adolescence on cognitive bias and functional connectome in emerging adulthood. 28 Wistar rats (sex-balanced; aged five weeks on arrival) were trained on a judgment bias task with distinct tactile cues signalling differential rewards. Cognitive bias was quantified from responses to ambiguous probe trials. Following training, animals were randomly and equally assigned to CRS or control groups (sex-balanced). Offline resting-state functional MRI scans were conducted at adolescent baseline (pre‑CRS) and again in adulthood (post‑CRS), followed by probe trials to assess neural and behavioural changes. Following CRS, females showed a greater tendency to shift toward negative bias than males (odds ratio=3.67). Furthermore, CRS significantly reduced functional connectivity between the left cerebellar–auditory and hypothalamic–thalamic networks only in females. Repeated-measures correlation between cognitive bias and network connectivity were not statistically significant across sex-by-group strata, potentially due to offline imaging and small sample size. However, intra-individual association revealed sex-specific trends, with CRS females showing moderately positive correlations and CRS males exhibiting a weak negative association. The results could inform stratified connectome-based interventions targeting adolescent stress exposures to potentially reduce the risk of adult depression.

Figure 1. Study Design and Timeline. 28 Wistar rats (sex balanced; aged 5 weeks on arrival) were habituated to the new environment for nine days after their arrival and prior to experiments. All rats were trained on Judgement Bias Task (JBT), for up to nine days. Behavioural tests and MRI scan were conducted before and after 14 consecutive days of CRS.

Recommended posters

SEX-DEPENDENT STRESS PROGRAMMING OF EMOTIONAL CIRCUITS: A C-FOS ACTIVATION STUDY IN MICE

Víctor Martín, Pepe Muñoz Martín, Patricia Chaves-Peña, María Inmaculada Infantes López, Cristina Ramírez Pérez, Alejandro Zea Doña, Sergi Castillo Espinar, Estela del Mar Sosa Osorio, Margarita Pérez Martín, Carmen Pedraza Benítez

SEX DIVERGENCE OF BASOLATERAL AMYGDALA CIRCUIT IN A MOUSE MODEL OF DEPRESSION

Claire-Helene de Badts, Viviana Maria Bisceglia, Alizée Traclet, Carine Moigneu, Claire Lecestre, Sébastien Wagner, Gabriel Lepousez, Pierre-Marie Lledo, Chantal Henry, Mariana Alonso

SEX-SPECIFIC EFFECTS OF CHRONIC NON-DISCRIMINATORY SOCIAL DEFEAT STRESS (CNSDS) ON VENTRAL HIPPOCAMPAL PLASTICITY AND BEHAVIORAL VULNERABILITY

Giovanni Signorini, Eleonora De Felice, Valentina Ferretti, Bernadette Basilico, Donald Ielpo, Silvia Alboni, Luisa Lo Iacono, Diego Andolina, Laura Maggi

DECODING SEX-SPECIFIC VULNERABILITY TO ADOLESCENT SOCIAL STRESS THROUGH HOMECAGE BEHAVIOR AND SPATIAL PROTEOMICS

Tobias Pohl, Maria Steinecker, Anja Magister, Unger Clara, Luna Strauch, Hanna Hörnberg

SEX-DEPENDENT ALTERATIONS IN HIPPOCAMPAL PROTEIN EXPRESSION INDUCED BY JUVENILE AND ADULT STRESS IN MICE

Patricia Chaves Peña, Jose Munoz-Martin, María Inmaculada Infantes-López, Víctor Martín-Aguiar, Alejandro Zea-Doña, Andrea Nieto-Quero, Margarita Pérez-Martín, Carmen Pedraza

INVESTIGATING SEX DIFFERENCES IN THE HYPOTHALAMIC BRAIN CIRCUITRY OF STRESS USING GENOMIC TECHNOLOGIES

Michelle Lam, Deshpande Sachin, Naresh K Hanchate

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.