Department of Pharmacology, Center for Biomedical Neuroscience, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, 78229, USA.
Department of Pharmacology, Center for Biomedical Neuroscience, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, 78229, USA.
Neuropharmacology. 2019 Dec 1;160:107791. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2019.107791. Epub 2019 Sep 22.
Deficits in cognitive flexibility, i.e. the ability to modify behavior in response to changes in the environment, are present in several psychiatric disorders and are often refractory to treatment. However, improving treatment response has been hindered by a lack of understanding of the neurobiology of cognitive flexibility. Using a rat model of chronic stress (chronic intermittent cold stress, CIC) that produces selective deficits in reversal learning, a form of cognitive flexibility dependent on orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) function, we have previously shown that JAK2 signaling is required for optimal reversal learning. In this study we explore the molecular basis of those effects. We show that, within the OFC, CIC stress reduces the levels of phosphorylated JAK2 and of ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF), a promoter of neuronal survival and an activator of JAK2 signaling, and that neutralizing endogenous CNTF with an intra-OFC microinjection of a specific antibody is sufficient to produce reversal-learning deficits similar to stress. Intra-OFC delivery of recombinant CNTF to CIC-stressed rats, at a dose that induces JAK2 and Akt but not STAT3 or ERK, ameliorates reversal-learning deficits, and Akt blockade prevents the positive effects of CNTF. Further analysis revealed that CNTF may exert its beneficial effects by inhibiting GSK3β, a substrate of Akt and a regulator of protein degradation. We also revealed a novel mechanism of CNTF action through modulation of p38/Mnk1/eIF4E signaling. This cascade controls translation of select mRNAs, including those encoding several plasticity-related proteins. Thus, we suggest that CNTF-driven JAK2 signaling corrects stress-induced reversal learning deficits by modulating the steady-state levels of plasticity-related proteins in the OFC.
认知灵活性缺陷,即根据环境变化修改行为的能力,存在于几种精神疾病中,且通常对治疗有抗性。然而,由于对认知灵活性的神经生物学缺乏了解,改善治疗反应一直受到阻碍。我们使用一种慢性应激(慢性间歇性冷应激,CIC)大鼠模型,该模型会选择性地产生反转学习缺陷,这是一种依赖眶额皮层(OFC)功能的认知灵活性形式,先前已经表明 JAK2 信号传导对于最佳反转学习是必需的。在这项研究中,我们探讨了这些影响的分子基础。我们表明,在 OFC 内,CIC 应激会降低磷酸化 JAK2 和睫状神经营养因子(CNTF)的水平,CNTF 是神经元存活的促进剂和 JAK2 信号传导的激活剂,并且用特异性抗体进行 OFC 内微注射中和内源性 CNTF 足以产生类似于应激的反转学习缺陷。向 CIC 应激大鼠的 OFC 内递送重组 CNTF,剂量足以诱导 JAK2 和 Akt,但不能诱导 STAT3 或 ERK,可改善反转学习缺陷,并且 Akt 阻断可防止 CNTF 的积极作用。进一步的分析表明,CNTF 可能通过抑制 GSK3β 发挥其有益作用,GSK3β 是 Akt 的底物,也是蛋白降解的调节剂。我们还揭示了 CNTF 通过调节 p38/Mnk1/eIF4E 信号传导发挥作用的新机制。该级联反应控制着特定 mRNA 的翻译,包括编码几种可塑性相关蛋白的 mRNA。因此,我们认为 CNTF 驱动的 JAK2 信号通过调节 OFC 中与可塑性相关的蛋白质的稳态水平来纠正应激诱导的反转学习缺陷。