McCoy Chelsea R, Rana Samir, Stringfellow Sara Anne, Day Jeremy J, Wyss J Michael, Clinton Sarah M, Kerman Ilan A
School of Neuroscience, Virginia Tech University, 1981 Kraft Drive, 2012 ILSB, Blacksburg, VA, 24060, USA.
Department of Cell, Developmental and Integrative Biology, University of Alabama, Birmingham, AL, USA.
Eur J Neurosci. 2016 Nov;44(10):2829-2845. doi: 10.1111/ejn.13404. Epub 2016 Oct 16.
Early-life stress (ELS) can alter neurodevelopment in variable ways, ranging from producing deleterious outcomes to stress resilience. While most ELS studies focus on its harmful effects, recent work by our laboratory and others shows that ELS elicits positive effects in certain individuals. We exposed Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats, known for a stress reactive, anxiety/depression-like phenotype, to maternal separation (MS), a model of ELS. MS exposure elicited anxiolytic and antidepressant behavioral effects as well as improved cardiovascular function in adult WKY offspring. This study interrogates an epigenetic mechanism (DNA methylation) that may confer the adaptive effects of MS in WKY offspring. We quantified global genome methylation levels in limbic brain regions of adult WKYs exposed to daily 180-min MS or neonatal handling from postnatal day 1-14. MS exposure triggered dramatic DNA hypermethylation specifically in the hippocampus. Next-generation sequencing methylome profiling revealed reduced methylation at intragenic sites within two key nodes of insulin signaling pathways: the insulin receptor and one of its major downstream targets, mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase 5 (Map3k5). We then tested the hypothesis that enhancing DNA methylation in WKY rats would elicit adaptive changes akin to the effects of MS. Dietary methyl donor supplementation improved WKY rats' anxiety/depression-like behaviors and also improved cardiovascular measures, similar to previous observations following MS. Overall, these data suggest a potential molecular mechanism that mediates a predicted adaptive response, whereby ELS induces DNA methylation changes in the brain that may contribute to successful stress coping and adaptive physiological changes in adulthood.
早期生活应激(ELS)能够以多种不同方式改变神经发育,范围从产生有害结果到应激适应力。虽然大多数ELS研究聚焦于其有害影响,但我们实验室及其他机构最近的研究表明,ELS在某些个体中会引发积极影响。我们将以应激反应性、焦虑/抑郁样表型著称的Wistar Kyoto(WKY)大鼠暴露于母体分离(MS)这一ELS模型中。MS暴露在成年WKY后代中引发了抗焦虑和抗抑郁行为效应以及改善了心血管功能。本研究探究了一种可能赋予WKY后代中MS适应性效应的表观遗传机制(DNA甲基化)。我们对成年WKY大鼠边缘脑区的全基因组甲基化水平进行了量化,这些大鼠在出生后第1天至14天每天接受180分钟的MS或新生期抚触。MS暴露特别在海马体中引发了显著的DNA高甲基化。下一代测序甲基化组分析显示,胰岛素信号通路的两个关键节点(胰岛素受体及其主要下游靶点之一,丝裂原活化蛋白激酶激酶激酶5,即Map3k5)的基因内位点甲基化减少。然后我们检验了这样一个假设,即增强WKY大鼠的DNA甲基化会引发类似于MS效应的适应性变化。膳食甲基供体补充改善了WKY大鼠的焦虑/抑郁样行为,并且也改善了心血管指标,类似于先前MS后的观察结果。总体而言,这些数据提示了一种潜在的分子机制,该机制介导了一种预期的适应性反应,即ELS诱导大脑中的DNA甲基化变化,这可能有助于成年期成功应对应激和适应性生理变化。