Dalgard Clifton L, Jacobowitz David M, Singh Vijay K, Saleem Kadharbatcha S, Ursano Robert J, Starr Joshua M, Pollard Harvey B
Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Genetics, and Center for Medical Proteomics, Uniformed Services University School of Medicine, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS), 4301 Jones Bridge Road, Bethesda, MD 20914, United States.
Department of Radiation Biology, Armed Forces Radiobiological Institute (AFRRI), Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS), 4301 Jones Bridge Road, Bethesda, MD 20914, United States.
Brain Res. 2015 Mar 10;1600:42-58. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2014.12.031. Epub 2014 Dec 18.
Fronto-limbic circuits in the primate brain are responsible for executive function, learning and memory, and emotions, including fear. Consequently, changes in gene expression in cortical and subcortical brain regions housing these circuits are associated with many important psychiatric and neurological disorders. While high quality gene expression profiles can be identified in brains from model organisms, primate brains have unique features such as Brodmann Area 25, which is absent in rodents, yet profoundly important in primates, including humans. The potential insights to be gained from studying the human brain are complicated by the fact that the post-mortem interval (PMI) is variable, and most repositories keep solid tissue in the deep frozen state. Consequently, sampling the important medial and internal regions of these brains is difficult. Here we describe a novel method for obtaining discrete regions from the fronto-limbic circuits of a 4 year old and a 5 year old, male, intact, frozen non-human primate (NHP) brain, for which the PMI is exactly known. The method also preserves high quality RNA, from which we use transcriptional profiling and a new algorithm to identify region-exclusive RNA signatures for Area 25 (NFκB and dopamine receptor signaling), the anterior cingulate cortex (LXR/RXR signaling), the amygdala (semaphorin signaling), and the hippocampus (Ca(++) and retinoic acid signaling). The RNA signatures not only reflect function of the different regions, but also include highly expressed RNAs for which function is either poorly understood, or which generate proteins presently lacking annotated functions. We suggest that this new approach will provide a useful strategy for identifying changes in fronto-limbic system biology underlying normal development, aging and disease in the human brain.
灵长类动物大脑中的额-边缘回路负责执行功能、学习和记忆以及包括恐惧在内的情绪。因此,这些回路所在的皮质和皮质下脑区的基因表达变化与许多重要的精神和神经疾病相关。虽然可以在模式生物的大脑中识别出高质量的基因表达谱,但灵长类动物的大脑具有独特的特征,如布罗德曼25区,这在啮齿动物中不存在,但在包括人类在内的灵长类动物中却极为重要。由于死后间隔时间(PMI)是可变的,而且大多数储存库将实体组织保存在深度冷冻状态,因此从研究人类大脑中获得潜在见解变得复杂。因此,对这些大脑的重要内侧和内部区域进行采样很困难。在这里,我们描述了一种从一只4岁和一只5岁雄性完整冷冻的非人类灵长类动物(NHP)大脑的额-边缘回路中获取离散区域的新方法,其PMI是确切已知的。该方法还能保存高质量的RNA,我们利用转录谱分析和一种新算法来识别25区(NFκB和多巴胺受体信号通路)、前扣带回皮质(LXR/RXR信号通路)、杏仁核(信号素信号通路)和海马体(Ca(++)和视黄酸信号通路)的区域特异性RNA特征。这些RNA特征不仅反映了不同区域的功能,还包括一些高表达的RNA,其功能要么了解甚少,要么产生目前缺乏注释功能的蛋白质。我们认为,这种新方法将为识别正常发育、衰老和人类大脑疾病背后的额-边缘系统生物学变化提供一种有用的策略。