Cognitive impairment, a core symptom of psychiatric disorders, is frequently observed in adolescents exposed to early-life stress (ES). However, the underlying neural mechanisms are unclear, and therapeutic efficacy is limited. Targeting parvalbumin-expressing interneurons (PVIs) in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), we report that ES reduces mPFC PVI activity, which causally mediated ES-induced cognitive deficits in adolescent male mice through chemogenetic and optogenetic experiments. To understand the possible causes of PVI activity reduction following ES, we then demonstrated that ES upregulated corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) receptor 1 [CRHR1, mainly expressed in pyramidal neurons (PNs)] and reduced activity of local pyramidal neurons (PNs) and their excitatory inputs to PVIs. The subsequent genetic manipulation experiments (CRHR1 knockout, CRH overexpression, and chemogenetics) highlight that ES-induced PVI activity reduction may result from CRHR1 upregulation and PN activity downregulation and that PVIs play indispensable roles in CRHR1- or PN-mediated cognitive deficits induced by ES. These results suggest that ES-induced cognitive deficits could be attributed to the prefrontal CRHR1-PN-PVI pathway. Finally, treatment with antalarmin (a CRHR1 antagonist) and environmental enrichment successfully restored the PVI activity and cognitive deficits induced by ES. These findings reveal the neurobiological mechanisms underlying ES-induced cognitive deficits in adolescent male mice and highlight the therapeutic potentials of PVIs in stress-related cognitive deficits in adolescent individuals.
© 2024. The Author(s).