Hair glucocorticoids are not a historical marker of stress: exploring the time-scale of corticosterone incorporation into hairs in a rat model

Research output: Working paperPreprintResearch

Standard

Hair glucocorticoids are not a historical marker of stress : exploring the time-scale of corticosterone incorporation into hairs in a rat model. / Colding-Jørgensen, Pernille; Hestehave, Sara; Abelson, Klas S.P.; Kalliokoski, Otto.

bioRxiv, 2020.

Research output: Working paperPreprintResearch

Harvard

Colding-Jørgensen, P, Hestehave, S, Abelson, KSP & Kalliokoski, O 2020 'Hair glucocorticoids are not a historical marker of stress: exploring the time-scale of corticosterone incorporation into hairs in a rat model' bioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.03.27.012377

APA

Colding-Jørgensen, P., Hestehave, S., Abelson, K. S. P., & Kalliokoski, O. (2020). Hair glucocorticoids are not a historical marker of stress: exploring the time-scale of corticosterone incorporation into hairs in a rat model. bioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.03.27.012377

Vancouver

Colding-Jørgensen P, Hestehave S, Abelson KSP, Kalliokoski O. Hair glucocorticoids are not a historical marker of stress: exploring the time-scale of corticosterone incorporation into hairs in a rat model. bioRxiv. 2020. https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.03.27.012377

Author

Colding-Jørgensen, Pernille ; Hestehave, Sara ; Abelson, Klas S.P. ; Kalliokoski, Otto. / Hair glucocorticoids are not a historical marker of stress : exploring the time-scale of corticosterone incorporation into hairs in a rat model. bioRxiv, 2020.

Bibtex

@techreport{4477fcd5dc8a42dfbe96d47119575902,
title = "Hair glucocorticoids are not a historical marker of stress: exploring the time-scale of corticosterone incorporation into hairs in a rat model",
abstract = "Hair glucocorticoids are increasingly popular biomarkers, used across numerous research fields as a measure of stress. Although they are suggested to be a proxy of the average HPA axis activity spanning a period of weeks or months into the past, this theory has never been tested.In the present study, adrenalectomized rats with no endogenous (adrenal) glucocorticoid production were used to study how circulating glucocorticoid levels would be reflected in the glucocorticoid levels found in hair samples. By dosing the animals daily with high levels of corticosterone for seven days, while sampling hairs before, during, and after treatments, a timeline for glucocorticoid uptake into hairs was constructed. This kinetic profile was compared to two hypothetical models, and the theory that hair glucocorticoids are a record of historical stress had to be rejected.Corticosterone concentrations in hairs were found to increase within three hours of the first injection, the highest concentrations were found on the seventh day of treatments, and the decrease in concentrations post-treatment suggests rapid elimination. We speculate that hair glucocorticoid levels can only be used to characterize a stress-response for a few days following a postulated stressor.An updated model, where glucocorticoids diffuse into, along, and out of hairs needs to be adopted to reconcile the experimentally obtained data. The inescapable consequence of this updated model is that hair glucocorticoids become a marker of – and can only be used to study – recent, or ongoing, stress, as opposed to historical events, weeks or months in the past.",
author = "Pernille Colding-J{\o}rgensen and Sara Hestehave and Abelson, {Klas S.P.} and Otto Kalliokoski",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1101/2020.03.27.012377",
language = "English",
publisher = "bioRxiv",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "bioRxiv",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Hair glucocorticoids are not a historical marker of stress

T2 - exploring the time-scale of corticosterone incorporation into hairs in a rat model

AU - Colding-Jørgensen, Pernille

AU - Hestehave, Sara

AU - Abelson, Klas S.P.

AU - Kalliokoski, Otto

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Hair glucocorticoids are increasingly popular biomarkers, used across numerous research fields as a measure of stress. Although they are suggested to be a proxy of the average HPA axis activity spanning a period of weeks or months into the past, this theory has never been tested.In the present study, adrenalectomized rats with no endogenous (adrenal) glucocorticoid production were used to study how circulating glucocorticoid levels would be reflected in the glucocorticoid levels found in hair samples. By dosing the animals daily with high levels of corticosterone for seven days, while sampling hairs before, during, and after treatments, a timeline for glucocorticoid uptake into hairs was constructed. This kinetic profile was compared to two hypothetical models, and the theory that hair glucocorticoids are a record of historical stress had to be rejected.Corticosterone concentrations in hairs were found to increase within three hours of the first injection, the highest concentrations were found on the seventh day of treatments, and the decrease in concentrations post-treatment suggests rapid elimination. We speculate that hair glucocorticoid levels can only be used to characterize a stress-response for a few days following a postulated stressor.An updated model, where glucocorticoids diffuse into, along, and out of hairs needs to be adopted to reconcile the experimentally obtained data. The inescapable consequence of this updated model is that hair glucocorticoids become a marker of – and can only be used to study – recent, or ongoing, stress, as opposed to historical events, weeks or months in the past.

AB - Hair glucocorticoids are increasingly popular biomarkers, used across numerous research fields as a measure of stress. Although they are suggested to be a proxy of the average HPA axis activity spanning a period of weeks or months into the past, this theory has never been tested.In the present study, adrenalectomized rats with no endogenous (adrenal) glucocorticoid production were used to study how circulating glucocorticoid levels would be reflected in the glucocorticoid levels found in hair samples. By dosing the animals daily with high levels of corticosterone for seven days, while sampling hairs before, during, and after treatments, a timeline for glucocorticoid uptake into hairs was constructed. This kinetic profile was compared to two hypothetical models, and the theory that hair glucocorticoids are a record of historical stress had to be rejected.Corticosterone concentrations in hairs were found to increase within three hours of the first injection, the highest concentrations were found on the seventh day of treatments, and the decrease in concentrations post-treatment suggests rapid elimination. We speculate that hair glucocorticoid levels can only be used to characterize a stress-response for a few days following a postulated stressor.An updated model, where glucocorticoids diffuse into, along, and out of hairs needs to be adopted to reconcile the experimentally obtained data. The inescapable consequence of this updated model is that hair glucocorticoids become a marker of – and can only be used to study – recent, or ongoing, stress, as opposed to historical events, weeks or months in the past.

U2 - 10.1101/2020.03.27.012377

DO - 10.1101/2020.03.27.012377

M3 - Preprint

BT - Hair glucocorticoids are not a historical marker of stress

PB - bioRxiv

ER -

ID: 300683421