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Sex-specific transcriptional signatures in human depression

Labonté, Benoit; Engmann, Olivia; Purushothaman, Immanuel; Menard, Caroline; Wang, Junshi; Tan, Chunfeng; Scarpa, Joseph R; Moy, Gregory; Loh, Yong-Hwee E; Cahill, Michael; Lorsch, Zachary S; Hamilton, Peter J; Calipari, Erin S; Hodes, Georgia E; Issler, Orna; Kronman, Hope; Pfau, Madeline; Obradovic, Aleksandar L J; Dong, Yan; Neve, Rachael L; Russo, Scott; Kazarskis, Andrew; Tamminga, Carol; Mechawar, Naguib; Turecki, Gustavo; Zhang, Bin; Shen, Li; Nestler, Eric J
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a leading cause of disease burden worldwide. While the incidence, symptoms and treatment of MDD all point toward major sex differences, the molecular mechanisms underlying this sexual dimorphism remain largely unknown. Here, combining differential expression and gene coexpression network analyses, we provide a comprehensive characterization of male and female transcriptional profiles associated with MDD across six brain regions. We overlap our human profiles with those from a mouse model, chronic variable stress, and capitalize on converging pathways to define molecular and physiological mechanisms underlying the expression of stress susceptibility in males and females. Our results show a major rearrangement of transcriptional patterns in MDD, with limited overlap between males and females, an effect seen in both depressed humans and stressed mice. We identify key regulators of sex-specific gene networks underlying MDD and confirm their sex-specific impact as mediators of stress susceptibility. For example, downregulation of the female-specific hub gene Dusp6 in mouse prefrontal cortex mimicked stress susceptibility in females, but not males, by increasing ERK signaling and pyramidal neuron excitability. Such Dusp6 downregulation also recapitulated the transcriptional remodeling that occurs in prefrontal cortex of depressed females. Together our findings reveal marked sexual dimorphism at the transcriptional level in MDD and highlight the importance of studying sex-specific treatments for this disorder.
PMID: 28825715
ISSN: 1546-170x
CID: 5503962

Tet1 in Nucleus Accumbens Opposes Depression- and Anxiety-Like Behaviors

Feng, Jian; Pena, Catherine J; Purushothaman, Immanuel; Engmann, Olivia; Walker, Deena; Brown, Amber N; Issler, Orna; Doyle, Marie; Harrigan, Eileen; Mouzon, Ezekiell; Vialou, Vincent; Shen, Li; Dawlaty, Meelad M; Jaenisch, Rudolf; Nestler, Eric J
Depression is a leading cause of disease burden, yet current therapies fully treat <50% of affected individuals. Increasing evidence implicates epigenetic mechanisms in depression and antidepressant action. Here we examined a possible role for the DNA dioxygenase, ten-eleven translocation protein 1 (TET1), in depression-related behavioral abnormalities. We applied chronic social defeat stress, an ethologically validated mouse model of depression-like behaviors, and examined Tet1 expression changes in nucleus accumbens (NAc), a key brain reward region. We show decreased Tet1 expression in NAc in stress-susceptible mice only. Surprisingly, selective knockout of Tet1 in NAc neurons of adult mice produced antidepressant-like effects in several behavioral assays. To identify Tet1 targets that mediate these actions, we performed RNAseq on NAc after conditional deletion of Tet1 and found that immune-related genes are the most highly dysregulated. Moreover, many of these genes are also upregulated in the NAc of resilient mice after chronic social defeat stress. These findings reveal a novel role for TET1, an enzyme important for DNA hydroxymethylation, in the brain's reward circuitry in modulating stress responses in mice. We also identify a subset of genes that are regulated by TET1 in this circuitry. These findings provide new insight into the pathophysiology of depression, which can aid in future antidepressant drug discovery efforts.
PMCID:5518912
PMID: 28074830
ISSN: 1740-634x
CID: 5503932

Early life stress confers lifelong stress susceptibility in mice via ventral tegmental area OTX2

Peña, Catherine J; Kronman, Hope G; Walker, Deena M; Cates, Hannah M; Bagot, Rosemary C; Purushothaman, Immanuel; Issler, Orna; Loh, Yong-Hwee Eddie; Leong, Tin; Kiraly, Drew D; Goodman, Emma; Neve, Rachael L; Shen, Li; Nestler, Eric J
Early life stress increases risk for depression. Here we establish a "two-hit" stress model in mice wherein stress at a specific postnatal period increases susceptibility to adult social defeat stress and causes long-lasting transcriptional alterations that prime the ventral tegmental area (VTA)-a brain reward region-to be in a depression-like state. We identify a role for the developmental transcription factor orthodenticle homeobox 2 (Otx2) as an upstream mediator of these enduring effects. Transient juvenile-but not adult-knockdown of Otx2 in VTA mimics early life stress by increasing stress susceptibility, whereas its overexpression reverses the effects of early life stress. This work establishes a mechanism by which early life stress encodes lifelong susceptibility to stress via long-lasting transcriptional programming in VTA mediated by Otx2.
PMID: 28619944
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 5503952

The Role of MicroRNAs in Stress-Induced Psychopathologies

Chapter by: Issler, Orna; Chen, A
in: Stress. Neuroendocrinology and neurobiology by Fink, George [Ed]
Amsterdam : Elsevier/AP, [2017]
pp. 117-126
ISBN: 9780128021750
CID: 5504312

Aberrant H3.3 dynamics in NAc promote vulnerability to depressive-like behavior

Lepack, Ashley E; Bagot, Rosemary C; Peña, Catherine J; Loh, Yong-Hwee E; Farrelly, Lorna A; Lu, Yang; Powell, Samuel K; Lorsch, Zachary S; Issler, Orna; Cates, Hannah M; Tamminga, Carol A; Molina, Henrik; Shen, Li; Nestler, Eric J; Allis, C David; Maze, Ian
Human major depressive disorder (MDD), along with related mood disorders, is among the world's greatest public health concerns; however, its pathophysiology remains poorly understood. Persistent changes in gene expression are known to promote physiological aberrations implicated in MDD. More recently, histone mechanisms affecting cell type- and regional-specific chromatin structures have also been shown to contribute to transcriptional programs related to depressive behaviors, as well as responses to antidepressants. Although much emphasis has been placed in recent years on roles for histone posttranslational modifications and chromatin-remodeling events in the etiology of MDD, it has become increasingly clear that replication-independent histone variants (e.g., H3.3), which differ in primary amino acid sequence from their canonical counterparts, similarly play critical roles in the regulation of activity-dependent neuronal transcription, synaptic connectivity, and behavioral plasticity. Here, we demonstrate a role for increased H3.3 dynamics in the nucleus accumbens (NAc)-a key limbic brain reward region-in the regulation of aberrant social stress-mediated gene expression and the precipitation of depressive-like behaviors in mice. We find that molecular blockade of these dynamics promotes resilience to chronic social stress and results in a partial renormalization of stress-associated transcriptional patterns in the NAc. In sum, our findings establish H3.3 dynamics as a critical, and previously undocumented, regulator of mood and suggest that future therapies aimed at modulating striatal histone dynamics may potentiate beneficial behavioral adaptations to negative emotional stimuli.
PMCID:5098673
PMID: 27791098
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 5503922

Alterations of the Host Microbiome Affect Behavioral Responses to Cocaine

Kiraly, Drew D; Walker, Deena M; Calipari, Erin S; Labonte, Benoit; Issler, Orna; Pena, Catherine J; Ribeiro, Efrain A; Russo, Scott J; Nestler, Eric J
Addiction to cocaine and other psychostimulants represents a major public health crisis. The development and persistence of addictive behaviors comes from a complex interaction of genes and environment - the precise mechanisms of which remain elusive. In recent years a surge of evidence has suggested that the gut microbiome can have tremendous impact on behavioral via the microbiota-gut-brain axis. In this study we characterized the influence of the gut microbiota on cocaine-mediated behaviors. Groups of mice were treated with a prolonged course of non-absorbable antibiotics via the drinking water, which resulted in a substantial reduction of gut bacteria. Animals with reduced gut bacteria showed an enhanced sensitivity to cocaine reward and enhanced sensitivity to the locomotor-sensitizing effects of repeated cocaine administration. These behavioral changes were correlated with adaptations in multiple transcripts encoding important synaptic proteins in the brain's reward circuitry. This study represents the first evidence that alterations in the gut microbiota affect behavioral response to drugs of abuse.
PMCID:5067576
PMID: 27752130
ISSN: 2045-2322
CID: 5503912

Circuit-wide Transcriptional Profiling Reveals Brain Region-Specific Gene Networks Regulating Depression Susceptibility

Bagot, Rosemary C; Cates, Hannah M; Purushothaman, Immanuel; Lorsch, Zachary S; Walker, Deena M; Wang, Junshi; Huang, Xiaojie; Schlüter, Oliver M; Maze, Ian; Peña, Catherine J; Heller, Elizabeth A; Issler, Orna; Wang, Minghui; Song, Won-Min; Stein, Jason L; Liu, Xiaochuan; Doyle, Marie A; Scobie, Kimberly N; Sun, Hao Sheng; Neve, Rachael L; Geschwind, Daniel; Dong, Yan; Shen, Li; Zhang, Bin; Nestler, Eric J
Depression is a complex, heterogeneous disorder and a leading contributor to the global burden of disease. Most previous research has focused on individual brain regions and genes contributing to depression. However, emerging evidence in humans and animal models suggests that dysregulated circuit function and gene expression across multiple brain regions drive depressive phenotypes. Here, we performed RNA sequencing on four brain regions from control animals and those susceptible or resilient to chronic social defeat stress at multiple time points. We employed an integrative network biology approach to identify transcriptional networks and key driver genes that regulate susceptibility to depressive-like symptoms. Further, we validated in vivo several key drivers and their associated transcriptional networks that regulate depression susceptibility and confirmed their functional significance at the levels of gene transcription, synaptic regulation, and behavior. Our study reveals novel transcriptional networks that control stress susceptibility and offers fundamentally new leads for antidepressant drug discovery.
PMCID:4896746
PMID: 27181059
ISSN: 1097-4199
CID: 5503902

Sex-Specific Transcriptional Signatures in Human Depression [Meeting Abstract]

Labonte, Benoit; Engmann, Olivia; Purushothaman, Immanuel; Menard, Caroline; Wang, Junshi; Tan, Chunfeng; Scarpa, Joseph; Moe, Gregory; Loe, Eddie; Cahill, Michael; Lorsch, Zachary; Peter, Hamilton; Calipari, Erin; Hodes, Georgia; Issler, Orna; Kronman, Hope; Pfau, Madeline; Obradovic, Aleksander; Dong, Yan; Neve, Rachael; Russo, Scott; Kazarskis, Andrew; Tamminga, Carol; Mechawar, Naguib; Turecki, Gustavo; Zhang, Bin; Shen, Li; Nestler, Eric
ISI:000440365600514
ISSN: 0893-133x
CID: 5504182

Granulocyte-Colony Stimulating Factor (G-CSF) Modulates Neuronal and Behavioral Plasticity in Response to Cocaine [Meeting Abstract]

Kiraly, Drew; Calipari, Erin; Labonte, Benoit; Walker, Deena; Issler, Orna; Russo, Scott; Nestler, Eric
ISI:000440365600540
ISSN: 0893-133x
CID: 5504192

Determining the role of microRNAs in psychiatric disorders

Issler, Orna; Chen, Alon
Recent studies have revealed that patients with psychiatric disorders have altered microRNA (miRNA) expression profiles in the circulation and brain. Furthermore, animal studies have shown that manipulating the levels of particular miRNAs in the brain can alter behaviour. Here, we review recent studies in humans, animal models, cellular systems and bioinformatics that have advanced our understanding of the contribution of brain miRNAs to the regulation of behaviour in the context of psychiatric conditions. These studies highlight the potential of miRNA levels to be used in the diagnosis of psychiatric disorders and suggest that brain miRNAs could become novel treatment targets for psychiatric disorders.
PMID: 25790865
ISSN: 1471-0048
CID: 5503892