1 883 146 CHRONIC COCAINE-REGULATED EPIGENOMIC CHANGES IN MOUSE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS. BACKGROUND: INCREASING EVIDENCE SUPPORTS A ROLE FOR ALTERED GENE EXPRESSION IN MEDIATING THE LASTING EFFECTS OF COCAINE ON THE BRAIN, AND RECENT WORK HAS DEMONSTRATED THE INVOLVEMENT OF CHROMATIN MODIFICATIONS IN THESE ALTERATIONS. HOWEVER, ALL SUCH STUDIES TO DATE HAVE BEEN RESTRICTED BY THEIR RELIANCE ON MICROARRAY TECHNOLOGIES THAT HAVE INTRINSIC LIMITATIONS. RESULTS: WE USE NEXT GENERATION SEQUENCING METHODS, RNA-SEQ AND CHIP-SEQ FOR RNA POLYMERASE II AND SEVERAL HISTONE METHYLATION MARKS, TO OBTAIN A MORE COMPLETE VIEW OF COCAINE-INDUCED CHANGES IN GENE EXPRESSION AND ASSOCIATED ADAPTATIONS IN NUMEROUS MODES OF CHROMATIN REGULATION IN THE MOUSE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS, A KEY BRAIN REWARD REGION. WE DEMONSTRATE AN UNEXPECTEDLY LARGE NUMBER OF PRE-MRNA SPLICING ALTERATIONS IN RESPONSE TO REPEATED COCAINE TREATMENT. IN ADDITION, WE IDENTIFY COMBINATIONS OF CHROMATIN CHANGES, OR SIGNATURES, THAT CORRELATE WITH COCAINE-DEPENDENT REGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION, INCLUDING THOSE INVOLVING PRE-MRNA ALTERNATIVE SPLICING. THROUGH BIOINFORMATIC PREDICTION AND BIOLOGICAL VALIDATION, WE IDENTIFY ONE PARTICULAR SPLICING FACTOR, A2BP1(RBFOX1/FOX-1), WHICH IS ENRICHED AT GENES THAT DISPLAY CERTAIN CHROMATIN SIGNATURES AND CONTRIBUTES TO DRUG-INDUCED BEHAVIORAL ABNORMALITIES. TOGETHER, THIS DELINEATION OF THE COCAINE-INDUCED EPIGENOME IN THE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS REVEALS SEVERAL NOVEL MODES OF REGULATION BY WHICH COCAINE ALTERS THE BRAIN. CONCLUSIONS: WE ESTABLISH COMBINATORIAL CHROMATIN AND TRANSCRIPTIONAL PROFILES IN MOUSE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS AFTER REPEATED COCAINE TREATMENT. THESE RESULTS SERVE AS AN IMPORTANT RESOURCE FOR THE FIELD AND PROVIDE A TEMPLATE FOR THE ANALYSIS OF OTHER SYSTEMS TO REVEAL NEW TRANSCRIPTIONAL AND EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS OF NEURONAL REGULATION. 2014 2 3375 47 HISTONE POSTTRANSLATIONAL MODIFICATIONS PREDICT SPECIFIC ALTERNATIVE EXON SUBTYPES IN MAMMALIAN BRAIN. A COMPELLING BODY OF LITERATURE, BASED ON NEXT GENERATION CHROMATIN IMMUNOPRECIPITATION AND RNA SEQUENCING OF REWARD BRAIN REGIONS INDICATES THAT THE REGULATION OF THE EPIGENETIC LANDSCAPE LIKELY UNDERLIES CHRONIC DRUG ABUSE AND ADDICTION. IT IS NOW CRITICAL TO DEVELOP HIGHLY INNOVATIVE COMPUTATIONAL STRATEGIES TO REVEAL THE RELEVANT REGULATORY TRANSCRIPTIONAL MECHANISMS THAT MAY UNDERLIE NEUROPSYCHIATRIC DISEASE. WE HAVE ANALYZED CHROMATIN REGULATION OF ALTERNATIVE SPLICING, WHICH IS IMPLICATED IN COCAINE EXPOSURE IN MICE. RECENT LITERATURE HAS DESCRIBED CHROMATIN-REGULATED ALTERNATIVE SPLICING, SUGGESTING A NOVEL FUNCTION FOR DRUG-INDUCED NEUROEPIGENETIC REMODELING. HOWEVER, THE EXTENT OF THE GENOME-WIDE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN PARTICULAR HISTONE MODIFICATIONS AND ALTERNATIVE SPLICING REMAINS UNEXPLORED. TO ADDRESS THIS, WE HAVE DEVELOPED NOVEL COMPUTATIONAL APPROACHES TO MODEL THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN ALTERNATIVE SPLICING AND HISTONE POSTTRANSLATIONAL MODIFICATIONS IN THE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS (NAC), A BRAIN REWARD REGION. USING CLASSICAL STATISTICAL METHODS AND MACHINE LEARNING TO COMBINE CHIP-SEQ AND RNA-SEQ DATA, WE FOUND THAT SPECIFIC HISTONE MODIFICATIONS ARE STRONGLY ASSOCIATED WITH VARIOUS ASPECTS OF DIFFERENTIAL SPLICING. H3K36ME3 AND H3K4ME1 HAVE THE STRONGEST ASSOCIATION WITH SPLICING INDICATING THEY PLAY A SIGNIFICANT ROLE IN ALTERNATIVE SPLICING IN BRAIN REWARD TISSUE. 2017 3 3952 39 LOCUS-SPECIFIC EPIGENETIC REMODELING CONTROLS ADDICTION- AND DEPRESSION-RELATED BEHAVIORS. CHRONIC EXPOSURE TO DRUGS OF ABUSE OR STRESS REGULATES TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS, CHROMATIN-MODIFYING ENZYMES AND HISTONE POST-TRANSLATIONAL MODIFICATIONS IN DISCRETE BRAIN REGIONS. GIVEN THE PROMISCUITY OF THE ENZYMES INVOLVED, IT HAS NOT YET BEEN POSSIBLE TO OBTAIN DIRECT CAUSAL EVIDENCE TO IMPLICATE THE REGULATION OF TRANSCRIPTION AND CONSEQUENT BEHAVIORAL PLASTICITY BY CHROMATIN REMODELING THAT OCCURS AT A SINGLE GENE. WE INVESTIGATED THE MECHANISM LINKING CHROMATIN DYNAMICS TO NEUROBIOLOGICAL PHENOMENA BY APPLYING ENGINEERED TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS TO SELECTIVELY MODIFY CHROMATIN AT A SPECIFIC MOUSE GENE IN VIVO. WE FOUND THAT HISTONE METHYLATION OR ACETYLATION AT THE FOSB LOCUS IN NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS, A BRAIN REWARD REGION, WAS SUFFICIENT TO CONTROL DRUG- AND STRESS-EVOKED TRANSCRIPTIONAL AND BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES VIA INTERACTIONS WITH THE ENDOGENOUS TRANSCRIPTIONAL MACHINERY. THIS APPROACH ALLOWED US TO RELATE THE EPIGENETIC LANDSCAPE AT A GIVEN GENE DIRECTLY TO REGULATION OF ITS EXPRESSION AND TO ITS SUBSEQUENT EFFECTS ON REWARD BEHAVIOR. 2014 4 1532 31 DNA METHYLATION DYNAMICS AND COCAINE IN THE BRAIN: PROGRESS AND PROSPECTS. CYTOSINE MODIFICATIONS, INCLUDING DNA METHYLATION, ARE STABLE EPIGENETIC MARKS THAT MAY TRANSLATE ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE INTO TRANSCRIPTIONAL REGULATION. RESEARCH HAS BEGUN TO INVESTIGATE DNA METHYLATION DYNAMICS IN RELATION TO COCAINE USE DISORDERS. SPECIFICALLY, DNA METHYLATION MACHINERY, INCLUDING METHYLTRANSFERASES AND BINDING PROTEINS, ARE DYSREGULATED IN BRAIN REWARD PATHWAYS AFTER CHRONIC COCAINE EXPOSURE. IN ADDITION, NUMEROUS METHYLOME-WIDE AND CANDIDATE PROMOTER STUDIES HAVE IDENTIFIED DIFFERENTIAL METHYLATION, AT THE NUCLEOTIDE LEVEL, IN RODENT MODELS OF COCAINE ABUSE AND DRUG SEEKING BEHAVIOR. THIS REVIEW HIGHLIGHTS THE CURRENT PROGRESS IN THE FIELD OF COCAINE-RELATED METHYLATION, AND OFFERS CONSIDERATIONS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH. 2017 5 2280 56 EPIGENETIC REGULATION IN DRUG ADDICTION. THE INTERACTION BETWEEN ENVIRONMENTAL SIGNALS AND GENES HAS NOW TAKEN ON A CLEAR MOLECULAR FORM AS DEMONSTRATED BY STABLE CHANGES IN CHROMATIN STRUCTURE. THESE CHANGES OCCUR THROUGH ACTIVATION OR REPRESSION OF SPECIFIC GENE PROGRAMMES BY A COMBINATION OF CHROMATIN REMODELLING, ACTIVATION AND ENZYMATIC MODIFICATION OF DNA AND HISTONES AS WELL AS NUCLEOSOMAL SUBUNIT EXCHANGE. RECENT RESEARCH INVESTIGATING THE MOLECULAR MECHANISMS CONTROLLING DRUG-INDUCED TRANSCRIPTIONAL, BEHAVIOURAL AND SYNAPTIC ACTIVITY HAS SHOWN A DIRECT ROLE FOR CHROMATIN REMODELLING--TERMED AS EPIGENETIC REGULATION--OF NEURONAL GENE PROGRAMMES AND SUBSEQUENT ADDICTIVE BEHAVIOUR ARISING FROM IT. RECENT DATA SUGGEST THAT REPEATED EXPOSURE TO CERTAIN DRUGS PROMOTES CHANGES IN LEVELS OF HISTONE ACETYLATION, PHOSPHORYLATION AND METHYLATION, TOGETHER WITH ALTERATIONS IN DNA METHYLATION LEVELS IN THE NEURONS OF THE BRAIN REWARD CENTRE, LOCALISED IN THE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS (NAC) REGION OF THE LIMBIC SYSTEM. THE COMBINATION OF ACETYLATING, PHOSPHORYLATING AND METHYLATING H3 AND H4 HISTONE TAILS ALTER CHROMATIN COMPACTION THEREBY PROMOTING ALTERED LEVELS OF CELLULAR GENE EXPRESSION. HISTONE MODIFICATIONS, WHICH WEAKEN HISTONE INTERACTION WITH DNA OR THAT PROMOTE RECRUITMENT OF TRANSCRIPTIONAL ACTIVATING COMPLEXES, CORRELATE WITH PERMISSIVE GENE EXPRESSION. HISTONE DEACETYLATION, (WHICH STRENGTHEN HISTONE: DNA CONTACTS), OR HISTONE METHYLATION, (WHICH RECRUITS REPRESSIVE COMPLEXES TO CHROMATIN), PROMOTE A STATE OF TRANSCRIPTIONAL REPRESSION. USING ANIMAL MODELS, ACUTE COCAINE TREATMENT INCREASES H4 ACETYLATION AT ACUTELY REGULATED GENE PROMOTERS, WHEREAS H3 ACETYLATION APPEARS TO PREDOMINATE AT CHRONICALLY INDUCED PROMOTERS. CHRONIC COCAINE AND ALCOHOL TREATMENT ACTIVATE AND REPRESS MANY GENES SUCH AS FOSB, CDK5, AND BDNF, WHERE THEIR DYSREGULATION, AT THE CHROMATIN LEVEL, CONTRIBUTE TO THE DEVELOPMENT AND MAINTENANCE OF ADDICTION. FOLLOWING DRUG EXPOSURE, IT IS STILL UNKNOWN, HOWVER, HOW LONG THESE CHANGES IN CHROMATIN STRUCTURE PERSIST IN AFFECTING NEURONAL FUNCTION, BUT SOME DO SO FOR LIFE. 2012 6 6517 34 TRANSCRIPTIONAL AND EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS OF ADDICTION. INVESTIGATIONS OF LONG-TERM CHANGES IN BRAIN STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION THAT ACCOMPANY CHRONIC EXPOSURE TO DRUGS OF ABUSE SUGGEST THAT ALTERATIONS IN GENE REGULATION CONTRIBUTE SUBSTANTIALLY TO THE ADDICTIVE PHENOTYPE. HERE, WE REVIEW MULTIPLE MECHANISMS BY WHICH DRUGS ALTER THE TRANSCRIPTIONAL POTENTIAL OF GENES. THESE MECHANISMS RANGE FROM THE MOBILIZATION OR REPRESSION OF THE TRANSCRIPTIONAL MACHINERY - INCLUDING THE TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS DELTAFOSB, CYCLIC AMP-RESPONSIVE ELEMENT BINDING PROTEIN (CREB) AND NUCLEAR FACTOR-KAPPAB (NF-KAPPAB) - TO EPIGENETICS - INCLUDING ALTERATIONS IN THE ACCESSIBILITY OF GENES WITHIN THEIR NATIVE CHROMATIN STRUCTURE INDUCED BY HISTONE TAIL MODIFICATIONS AND DNA METHYLATION, AND THE REGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION BY NON-CODING RNAS. INCREASING EVIDENCE IMPLICATES THESE VARIOUS MECHANISMS OF GENE REGULATION IN THE LASTING CHANGES THAT DRUGS OF ABUSE INDUCE IN THE BRAIN, AND OFFERS NOVEL INROADS FOR ADDICTION THERAPY. 2011 7 6806 39 [EPIGENETICS AND DRUG ADDICTION: A FOCUS ON MECP2 AND ON HISTONE ACETYLATION]. CHRONIC DRUG EXPOSURE ALTERS GENE EXPRESSION IN THE BRAIN, WHICH IS BELIEVED TO UNDERLIE COMPULSIVE DRUG SEEKING AND DRUG TAKING BEHAVIOR. RECENT EVIDENCE SHOWS THAT DRUG-INDUCED LONG-TERM NEUROADAPTATIONS IN THE BRAIN ARE MEDIATED IN PART BY EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS. BY REMODELING CHROMATIN, THIS TYPE OF REGULATION CONTRIBUTES TO DRUG-INDUCED SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY THAT TRANSLATES INTO BEHAVIORAL MODIFICATIONS. HOW DRUG-INDUCED ALTERATIONS IN DNA METHYLATION REGULATE GENE EXPRESSION IS REVIEWED HERE, WITH A FOCUS ON MECP2, A PROTEIN BINDING METHYLATED DNA. THE IMPORTANCE OF HISTONE MODIFICATIONS, ESPECIALLY ACETYLATION IS ALSO DISCUSSED, WITH AN EMPHASIS ON THE EFFECTS OF INHIBITORS OF HISTONE DEACETYLASES ON DRUG-INDUCED BEHAVIORAL CHANGES. THE PRECISE IDENTIFICATION OF THE EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS THAT ARE UNDER THE CONTROL OF DRUGS OF ABUSE MAY HELP TO UNCOVER NOVEL TARGETS FOR THE TREATMENT OF DRUG SEEKING AND RELAPSE. 2015 8 2606 46 EPIGENETICS-BEYOND THE GENOME IN ALCOHOLISM. GENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS PLAY A ROLE IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF ALCOHOLISM. WHOLE-GENOME EXPRESSION PROFILING HAS HIGHLIGHTED THE IMPORTANCE OF SEVERAL GENES THAT MAY CONTRIBUTE TO ALCOHOL ABUSE DISORDERS. IN ADDITION, MORE RECENT FINDINGS HAVE ADDED YET ANOTHER LAYER OF COMPLEXITY TO THE OVERALL MOLECULAR MECHANISMS INVOLVED IN A PREDISPOSITION TO ALCOHOLISM AND ADDICTION BY DEMONSTRATING THAT PROCESSES RELATED TO GENETIC FACTORS THAT DO NOT MANIFEST AS DNA SEQUENCE CHANGES (I.E., EPIGENETIC PROCESSES) PLAY A ROLE. BOTH ACUTE AND CHRONIC ETHANOL EXPOSURE CAN ALTER GENE EXPRESSION LEVELS IN SPECIFIC NEURONAL CIRCUITS THAT GOVERN THE BEHAVIORAL CONSEQUENCES RELATED TO TOLERANCE AND DEPENDENCE. THE UNREMITTING CYCLE OF ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION OFTEN INCLUDES SATIATION AND SELF-MEDICATION WITH ALCOHOL, FOLLOWED BY EXCRUCIATING WITHDRAWAL SYMPTOMS AND THE RESULTANT RELAPSE, WHICH REFLECTS BOTH THE POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE AFFECTIVE STATES OF ALCOHOL ADDICTION. RECENT STUDIES HAVE INDICATED THAT BEHAVIORAL CHANGES INDUCED BY ACUTE AND CHRONIC ETHANOL EXPOSURE MAY INVOLVE CHROMATIN REMODELING RESULTING FROM COVALENT HISTONE MODIFICATIONS AND DNA METHYLATION IN THE NEURONAL CIRCUITS INVOLVING A BRAIN REGION CALLED THE AMYGDALA. THESE FINDINGS HAVE HELPED IDENTIFY ENZYMES INVOLVED IN EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS, SUCH AS THE HISTONE DEACETYLASE, HISTONE ACETYLTRANSFERASE, AND DNA METHYLTRANSFERASE ENZYMES, AS NOVEL THERAPEUTIC TARGETS FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF FUTURE PHARMACOTHERAPIES FOR THE TREATMENT OF ALCOHOLISM. 2012 9 2598 39 EPIGENETICS OF THE DEPRESSED BRAIN: ROLE OF HISTONE ACETYLATION AND METHYLATION. MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER IS A CHRONIC, REMITTING SYNDROME INVOLVING WIDELY DISTRIBUTED CIRCUITS IN THE BRAIN. STABLE ALTERATIONS IN GENE EXPRESSION THAT CONTRIBUTE TO STRUCTURAL AND FUNCTIONAL CHANGES IN MULTIPLE BRAIN REGIONS ARE IMPLICATED IN THE HETEROGENEITY AND PATHOGENESIS OF THE ILLNESS. EPIGENETIC EVENTS THAT ALTER CHROMATIN STRUCTURE TO REGULATE PROGRAMS OF GENE EXPRESSION HAVE BEEN ASSOCIATED WITH DEPRESSION-RELATED BEHAVIOR, ANTIDEPRESSANT ACTION, AND RESISTANCE TO DEPRESSION OR 'RESILIENCE' IN ANIMAL MODELS, WITH INCREASING EVIDENCE FOR SIMILAR MECHANISMS OCCURRING IN POSTMORTEM BRAINS OF DEPRESSED HUMANS. IN THIS REVIEW, WE DISCUSS RECENT ADVANCES IN OUR UNDERSTANDING OF EPIGENETIC CONTRIBUTIONS TO DEPRESSION, IN PARTICULAR THE ROLE OF HISTONE ACETYLATION AND METHYLATION, WHICH ARE REVEALING NOVEL MECHANISTIC INSIGHT INTO THE SYNDROME THAT MAY AID IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF NOVEL TARGETS FOR DEPRESSION TREATMENT. 2013 10 3398 34 HOW ALCOHOL DRINKING AFFECTS OUR GENES: AN EPIGENETIC POINT OF VIEW. THIS WORK HIGHLIGHTS RECENT STUDIES IN EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS THAT PLAY A ROLE IN ALCOHOLISM, WHICH IS A COMPLEX MULTIFACTORIAL DISORDER. THERE IS A LARGE BODY OF EVIDENCE SHOWING THAT ALCOHOL CAN MODIFY GENE EXPRESSION THROUGH EPIGENETIC PROCESSES, NAMELY DNA METHYLATION AND NUCLEOSOMAL REMODELING VIA HISTONE MODIFICATIONS. IN THAT REGARD, CHRONIC EXPOSURE TO ETHANOL MODIFIES DNA AND HISTONE METHYLATION, HISTONE ACETYLATION, AND MICRORNA EXPRESSION. THE ALCOHOL-MEDIATED CHROMATIN REMODELING IN THE BRAIN PROMOTES THE TRANSITION FROM USE TO ABUSE AND ADDICTION. UNRAVELLING THE MULTIPLEX PATTERN OF MOLECULAR MODIFICATIONS INDUCED BY ETHANOL COULD SUPPORT THE DEVELOPMENT OF NEW THERAPIES FOR ALCOHOLISM AND DRUG ADDICTION TARGETING EPIGENETIC PROCESSES. 2019 11 5624 40 SELECTIVE BOOSTING OF TRANSCRIPTIONAL AND BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES TO DRUGS OF ABUSE BY HISTONE DEACETYLASE INHIBITION. HISTONE ACETYLATION AND OTHER MODIFICATIONS OF THE CHROMATIN ARE IMPORTANT REGULATORS OF GENE EXPRESSION AND, CONSEQUENTLY, MAY CONTRIBUTE TO DRUG-INDUCED BEHAVIORS AND NEUROPLASTICITY. EARLIER STUDIES HAVE SHOWN THAT A REDUCTION IN HISTONE DEACETYLASE (HDAC) ACTIVITY RESULTS IN THE ENHANCEMENT OF SOME PSYCHOSTIMULANT-INDUCED BEHAVIORS. IN THIS STUDY, WE EXTEND THOSE SEMINAL FINDINGS BY SHOWING THAT THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE HDAC INHIBITOR SODIUM BUTYRATE ENHANCES MORPHINE-INDUCED LOCOMOTOR SENSITIZATION AND CONDITIONED PLACE PREFERENCE. IN CONTRAST, THIS COMPOUND HAS NO EFFECTS ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF MORPHINE TOLERANCE AND DEPENDENCE. SIMILAR EFFECTS WERE OBSERVED FOR COCAINE AND ETHANOL-INDUCED BEHAVIORS. THESE BEHAVIORAL CHANGES WERE ACCOMPANIED BY A SELECTIVE BOOSTING OF A COMPONENT OF THE TRANSCRIPTIONAL PROGRAM ACTIVATED BY CHRONIC MORPHINE ADMINISTRATION THAT INCLUDED CIRCADIAN CLOCK GENES AND OTHER GENES RELEVANT TO ADDICTIVE BEHAVIOR. OUR RESULTS SUPPORT A SPECIFIC FUNCTION FOR HISTONE ACETYLATION AND THE EPIGENETIC MODULATION OF TRANSCRIPTION AT A REDUCED NUMBER OF BIOLOGICALLY RELEVANT LOCI ON NON-HOMEOSTATIC, LONG-LASTING, DRUG-INDUCED BEHAVIORAL PLASTICITY. 2009 12 5645 42 SEX DEPENDENT ALTERATION OF EPIGENETIC MARKS AFTER CHRONIC MORPHINE TREATMENT IN MICE ORGANS. EPIGENETIC MARKS MAY BE ALSO AFFECTED BY SEVERAL FACTORS, SUCH AS AGE, LIFESTYLE, EARLY LIFE EXPERIENCES AND EXPOSURE TO CHEMICALS OR DRUGS, SUCH AS OPIOIDS. PREVIOUS STUDIES HAVE FOCUSED ON HOW MORPHINE EPIGENETICALLY REGULATES DIFFERENT REGIONS OF THE BRAIN THAT ARE IMPLICATED IN TOLERANCE, DEPENDENCE AND OTHER PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS MORE RELATED TO THE PHYSIO-PATHOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF OPIOIDS. NEVERTHELESS, A SIGNIFICANT KNOWLEDGE GAP REMAINS REGARDING THE EFFECT OF CHRONIC TREATMENT ON OTHER ORGANS AND BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS. THEREFORE, THE AIM OF THIS WORK IS TO INCREASE OUR KNOWLEDGE ABOUT THE IMPACT OF CHRONIC MORPHINE EXPOSURE ON DNA METHYLATION AND HISTONE MODIFICATION LEVELS IN EACH OF THE ORGANS OF MALE AND FEMALE MODEL MICE IN VIVO. OUR RESULTS REVEAL, FOR THE FIRST TIME, THAT CHRONIC MORPHINE TREATMENT INDUCED CHANGES IN DNA METHYLATION/HYDROXYMETHYLATION AND HISTONE MODIFICATION IN-VIVO AT THE SYSTEMIC LEVEL, REVEALING A POTENTIAL PHYSIOLOGICAL EFFECT ON THE REGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION. NOTABLY, MORPHINE-INDUCED EPIGENETIC MODIFICATION OCCURS IN A SEX-DEPENDENT MANNER, REVEALING THE EXISTENCE OF DIFFERENT UNDERLYING MECHANISMS OF EPIGENETIC MODIFICATION IN MALE AND FEMALE MICE. 2021 13 3376 30 HISTONE-MEDIATED EPIGENETICS IN ADDICTION. MANY OF THE BRAIN REGIONS, NEUROTRANSMITTER SYSTEMS, AND BEHAVIORAL CHANGES THAT OCCUR AFTER OCCASIONAL DRUG USE IN HEALTHY SUBJECTS AND AFTER CHRONIC DRUG ABUSE IN ADDICTED PATIENTS ARE WELL CHARACTERIZED. AN EMERGING LITERATURE SUGGESTS THAT EPIGENETIC PROCESSES, THOSE PROCESSES THAT REGULATE THE ACCESSIBILITY OF DNA TO REGULATORY PROTEINS WITHIN THE NUCLEUS, ARE KEYS TO HOW ADDICTION DEVELOPS AND HOW IT MAY BE TREATED. INVESTIGATIONS OF THE REGULATION OF CHROMATIN, THE ORGANIZATIONAL SYSTEM OF DNA, BY HISTONE MODIFICATION ARE LEADING TO A NEW UNDERSTANDING OF THE CELLULAR AND BEHAVIORAL ALTERATIONS THAT OCCUR AFTER DRUG USE. WE WILL DESCRIBE HOW, WHEN, AND WHERE HISTONE TAILS ARE MODIFIED AND HOW SOME OF THE MOST RECOGNIZED HISTONE REGULATION PATTERNS ARE INVOLVED IN THE CYCLE OF ADDICTION, INCLUDING INITIAL AND CHRONIC DRUG INTAKE, WITHDRAWAL, ABSTINENCE, AND RELAPSE. FINALLY, WE CONSIDER HOW AN APPROACH THAT TARGETS HISTONE MODIFICATIONS MAY PROMOTE SUCCESSFUL TREATMENT. 2014 14 2058 28 EPIGENETIC CONTROL OF GENE EXPRESSION IN THE ALCOHOLIC BRAIN. CHRONIC ALCOHOL EXPOSURE CAUSES WIDESPREAD CHANGES IN BRAIN GENE EXPRESSION IN HUMANS AND ANIMAL MODELS. MANY OF THESE CONTRIBUTE TO CELLULAR ADAPTATIONS THAT ULTIMATELY LEAD TO BEHAVIORAL TOLERANCE AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE. THERE IS AN EMERGING APPRECIATION FOR THE ROLE OF EPIGENETIC PROCESSES IN ALCOHOL-INDUCED CHANGES IN BRAIN GENE EXPRESSION AND BEHAVIOR. FOR EXAMPLE, CHRONIC ALCOHOL EXPOSURE PRODUCES CHANGES IN DNA AND HISTONE METHYLATION, HISTONE ACETYLATION, AND MICRORNA EXPRESSION THAT AFFECT EXPRESSION OF MULTIPLE GENES IN VARIOUS TYPES OF BRAIN CELLS (I.E., NEURONS AND GLIA) AND CONTRIBUTE TO BRAIN PATHOLOGY AND BRAIN PLASTICITY ASSOCIATED WITH ALCOHOL ABUSE AND DEPENDENCE. DRUGS TARGETING THE EPIGENETIC "MASTER REGULATORS" ARE EMERGING AS POTENTIAL THERAPEUTICS FOR NEURODEGENERATIVE DISORDERS AND DRUG ADDICTION. 2013 15 4236 42 METHYLATION OF THE TYROSINE HYDROXYLASE GENE IS DYSREGULATED BY COCAINE DEPENDENCE IN THE HUMAN STRIATUM. COCAINE DEPENDENCE IS A CHRONIC, RELAPSING DISORDER CAUSED BY LASTING CHANGES IN THE BRAIN. ANIMAL STUDIES HAVE IDENTIFIED COCAINE-RELATED ALTERATIONS IN STRIATAL DNA METHYLATION; HOWEVER, IT IS UNCLEAR HOW METHYLATION IS RELATED TO COCAINE DEPENDENCE IN HUMANS. WE GENERATED METHYLOMIC PROFILES OF THE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS USING HUMAN POSTMORTEM BRAINS FROM A COHORT OF INDIVIDUALS WITH COCAINE DEPENDENCE AND HEALTHY CONTROLS (N = 25 PER GROUP). WE FOUND HYPERMETHYLATION IN A CLUSTER OF CPGS WITHIN THE GENE BODY OF TYROSINE HYDROXYLASE (TH), CONTAINING A PUTATIVE BINDING SITE FOR THE EARLY GROWTH RESPONSE 1 (EGR1) TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR, WHICH IS HYPERMETHYLATED IN THE CAUDATE NUCLEUS OF COCAINE-DEPENDENT INDIVIDUALS. WE REPLICATED THIS FINDING AND FOUND IT TO BE SPECIFIC TO STRIATAL NEURONAL NUCLEI. FURTHERMORE, THIS LOCUS DEMONSTRATES ENHANCER ACTIVITY WHICH IS ATTENUATED BY METHYLATION AND ENHANCED BY EGR1 OVEREXPRESSION. THESE RESULTS SUGGEST THAT COCAINE DEPENDENCE ALTERS THE EPIGENETIC REGULATION OF DOPAMINERGIC SIGNALING GENES. 2021 16 2250 33 EPIGENETIC MODULATION OF OPIOID RECEPTORS BY DRUGS OF ABUSE. CHRONIC EXPOSURE TO DRUGS OF ABUSE PRODUCES PROFOUND CHANGES IN GENE EXPRESSION AND NEURAL ACTIVITY ASSOCIATED WITH DRUG-SEEKING AND TAKING BEHAVIOR. DYSREGULATION OF OPIOID RECEPTOR GENE EXPRESSION IS COMMONLY OBSERVED ACROSS A VARIETY OF ABUSED SUBSTANCES INCLUDING OPIOIDS, COCAINE, AND ALCOHOL. EARLY STUDIES IN CULTURED CELLS SHOWED THAT THE SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL GENE EXPRESSION OF OPIOID RECEPTORS ARE REGULATED BY EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS INCLUDING DNA AND HISTONE MODIFICATIONS AND NON-CODING RNAS. ACCUMULATING EVIDENCE INDICATE THAT DRUGS OF ABUSE CAN MODULATE OPIOID RECEPTOR GENE EXPRESSION BY TARGETING VARIOUS EPIGENETIC REGULATORY NETWORKS. BASED ON CURRENT CELLULAR AND ANIMAL MODELS OF SUBSTANCE USE DISORDER AND CLINICAL EVIDENCE, THIS REVIEW SUMMARIZES HOW CHRONIC DRUG EXPOSURE ALTERS THE GENE EXPRESSION OF MU, DELTA, KAPPA, AND NOCICEPTIN RECEPTORS VIA DNA AND HISTONE MODIFICATIONS. THE INFLUENCE OF DRUGS OF ABUSE ON EPIGENETIC MODULATORS, SUCH AS NON-CODING RNAS AND TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS, IS ALSO PRESENTED. FINALLY, THE THERAPEUTIC POTENTIAL OF MANIPULATING EPIGENETIC PROCESSES AS AN AVENUE TO TREAT SUBSTANCE USE DISORDER IS DISCUSSED. 2022 17 1870 43 EMERGING ROLE OF EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS IN ALCOHOL ADDICTION. ALCOHOL USE DISORDER (AUD) IS A COMPLEX BRAIN DISORDER WITH AN ARRAY OF PERSISTENT BEHAVIORAL AND NEUROCHEMICAL MANIFESTATIONS. BOTH GENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS ARE KNOWN TO CONTRIBUTE TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF AUD, AND RECENT STUDIES ON ALCOHOL EXPOSURE AND SUBSEQUENT CHANGES IN GENE EXPRESSION SUGGEST THE IMPORTANCE OF EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS. IN PARTICULAR, HISTONE MODIFICATIONS AND DNA METHYLATION HAVE EMERGED AS IMPORTANT REGULATORS OF GENE EXPRESSION AND ASSOCIATED PHENOTYPES OF AUD. GIVEN THE THERAPEUTIC POTENTIAL OF EPIGENETIC TARGETS, THIS REVIEW AIMS TO SUMMARIZE THE ROLE OF EPIGENETIC REGULATION IN OUR CURRENT UNDERSTANDING OF AUD BY EVALUATING KNOWN EPIGENETIC SIGNATURES OF BRAIN REGIONS CRITICAL TO ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS IN BOTH ANIMAL AND HUMAN STUDIES THROUGHOUT VARIOUS STAGES OF AUD. MORE SPECIFICALLY, THE EFFECTS OF ACUTE AND CHRONIC ALCOHOL EXPOSURE, TOLERANCE, AND POSTEXPOSURE WITHDRAWAL ON EPIGENETICALLY INDUCED CHANGES TO GENE EXPRESSION AND SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY WITHIN KEY BRAIN REGIONS AND THE ASSOCIATED BEHAVIORAL PHENOTYPES HAVE BEEN DISCUSSED. UNDERSTANDING THE CONTRIBUTION OF EPIGENETIC REGULATION TO CRUCIAL SIGNALING PATHWAYS MAY PROVE VITAL FOR FUTURE DEVELOPMENT OF NOVEL BIOMARKERS AND TREATMENT AGENTS IN AMELIORATING OR PREVENTING AUD. 2017 18 2489 31 EPIGENETICALLY MODIFIED NUCLEOTIDES IN CHRONIC HEROIN AND COCAINE TREATED MICE. EPIGENETIC CHANGES INCLUDE THE ADDITION OF A METHYL GROUP TO THE 5' CARBON OF THE CYTOSINE RING, KNOWN AS DNA METHYLATION, WHICH RESULTS IN THE GENERATION OF THE FIFTH DNA BASE, NAMELY 5-METHYLCYTOSINE. DURING ACTIVE OR PASSIVE DEMETHYLATION, AN INTERMEDIATE MODIFIED BASE IS FORMED, 5-HYDROXYMETHYLCYTOSINE. WE HAVE CURRENTLY QUANTIFIED 5-METHYLCYTOSINE AND 5-HYDROXYMETHYLCYTOSINE IN THE LIVER AND BRAIN OF MICE TREATED WITH COCAINE OR HEROIN, USING LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY/TANDEM MASS SPECTROMETRY (LC-MS/MS). OUR RESULTS SHOW THAT GLOBAL 5-METHYLCYTOSINE LEVELS ARE NOT AFFECTED BY HEROIN OR COCAINE ADMINISTRATION, NEITHER IN THE LIVER NOR IN THE BRAIN. HOWEVER, 5-HYDROXYMETHYLCYTOSINE LEVELS ARE REDUCED IN THE LIVER FOLLOWING COCAINE ADMINISTRATION, WHILE THEY ARE NOT AFFECTED BY COCAINE IN THE BRAIN OR BY HEROIN ADMINISTRATION IN THE LIVER AND THE BRAIN. ELUCIDATION OF THE EPIGENETIC PHENOMENA THAT TAKES PLACE WITH RESPECT TO DRUG ABUSE AND ADDICTION, VIA QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF DIFFERENT MODIFIED BASES, MAY ENABLE A BETTER UNDERSTANDING OF THE UNDERLYING MECHANISMS AND MAY LEAD TO MORE PERSONALIZED AND EFFECTIVE TREATMENT OPTIONS. 2014 19 2513 36 EPIGENETICS AND PSYCHOSTIMULANT ADDICTION. CHRONIC DRUG EXPOSURE ALTERS GENE EXPRESSION IN THE BRAIN AND PRODUCES LONG-TERM CHANGES IN NEURAL NETWORKS THAT UNDERLIE COMPULSIVE DRUG TAKING AND SEEKING. EXACTLY HOW DRUG-INDUCED CHANGES IN SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY AND SUBSEQUENT GENE EXPRESSION ARE TRANSLATED INTO PERSISTENT NEUROADAPTATIONS REMAINS UNCLEAR. EMERGING EVIDENCE SUGGESTS THAT COMPLEX DRUG-INDUCED NEUROADAPTATIONS IN THE BRAIN ARE MEDIATED BY HIGHLY SYNCHRONIZED AND DYNAMIC PATTERNS OF GENE REGULATION. RECENTLY, IT HAS BECOME CLEAR THAT EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS CONTRIBUTE TO DRUG-INDUCED STRUCTURAL, SYNAPTIC, AND BEHAVIORAL PLASTICITY BY REGULATING EXPRESSION OF GENE NETWORKS. HERE WE REVIEW HOW ALTERATIONS IN HISTONE MODIFICATIONS, DNA METHYLATION, AND MICRORNAS REGULATE GENE EXPRESSION AND CONTRIBUTE TO PSYCHOSTIMULANT ADDICTION WITH A FOCUS ON THE EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS THAT REGULATE BRAIN-DERIVED NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR (BDNF) EXPRESSION FOLLOWING CHRONIC COCAINE EXPOSURE. IDENTIFYING EPIGENETIC SIGNATURES THAT DEFINE PSYCHOSTIMULANT ADDICTION MAY LEAD TO NOVEL, EFFICACIOUS TREATMENTS FOR DRUG CRAVING AND RELAPSE. 2013 20 4093 37 MATERNAL SEPARATION FOLLOWED BY CHRONIC MILD STRESS IN ADULTHOOD IS ASSOCIATED WITH CONCERTED EPIGENETIC REGULATION OF AP-1 COMPLEX GENES. DEPRESSION IS ONE OF THE MOST PREVALENT MENTAL DISEASES WORLDWIDE. PATIENTS WITH PSYCHIATRIC DISEASES OFTEN HAVE A HISTORY OF CHILDHOOD NEGLECT, INDICATING THAT EARLY-LIFE EXPERIENCES PREDISPOSE TO PSYCHIATRIC DISEASES IN ADULTHOOD. TWO STRONG MODELS WERE USED IN THE PRESENT STUDY: THE MATERNAL SEPARATION/EARLY DEPRIVATION MODEL (MS) AND THE CHRONIC MILD STRESS MODEL (CMS). IN BOTH MODELS, WE FOUND CHANGES IN THE EXPRESSION OF A NUMBER OF GENES SUCH AS CREB AND NPY. STRIKINGLY, THERE WAS A CLEAR REGULATION OF EXPRESSION OF FOUR GENES INVOLVED IN THE AP-1 COMPLEX: C-FOS, C-JUN, FOSB, AND JUN-B. INTERESTINGLY, DIFFERENT EXPRESSION LEVELS WERE OBSERVED DEPENDING ON THE MODEL, WHEREAS THE COMBINATION OF THE MODELS RESULTED IN A NORMAL LEVEL OF GENE EXPRESSION. THE EFFECTS OF MS AND CMS ON GENE EXPRESSION WERE ASSOCIATED WITH DISTINCT HISTONE METHYLATION/ACETYLATION PATTERNS OF ALL FOUR GENES. THE EPIGENETIC CHANGES, LIKE GENE EXPRESSION, WERE ALSO DEPENDENT ON THE SPECIFIC STRESSOR OR THEIR COMBINATION. THE OBTAINED RESULTS SUGGEST THAT SINGLE LIFE EVENTS LEAVE A MARK ON GENE EXPRESSION AND THE EPIGENETIC SIGNATURE OF GENE PROMOTERS, BUT A COMBINATION OF DIFFERENT STRESSORS AT DIFFERENT LIFE STAGES CAN FURTHER CHANGE GENE EXPRESSION THROUGH EPIGENETIC FACTORS, POSSIBLY CAUSING THE LONG-LASTING ADVERSE EFFECTS OF STRESS. 2021