A diet enriched with Curcumin promotes resilience to chronic social defeat stress (animal)
Aubry and team (2019) experiments on a strain of mice highly susceptible to chronic social defeat stress (CSDS) to test the efficacy of 1.5% dietary curcumin, a polyphenol compound found in the turmeric plant known to possess anti-inflammatory and antidepressant properties, on promoting resilience. Although a 4.5 fold improvement in stress resilience was seen in the mice with administration during CSDS, 36% of the mice were still susceptible to the effects of the stress (non-responders). Those who demonstrated resilience (responders) were found to release less corticosterone following acute restraint stress and had lower concentrations of peripheral IL-6 compared to non-responders, which could indicate the involvement of the NF-κB pathway in the response. Another promising sign was the preventative effect curcumin had on anxiety-like behaviour in both responders and non-responders in the elevated-plus maze and open field test. The study provides the first preclinical evidence of curcumin in improving resilience in response to CSDS, and also suggests its potential role in preventing anxiety-like symptoms during exposure to chronic social stress. [NPID: resilience, stress, CSDS, curcumin, polyphenols, turmeric, anti-inflammatory, inflammation, depression, corticosterone, anxiety, social stress]
Year: 2019