1 4931 136 PATERNAL ALCOHOL EXPOSURE REDUCES ALCOHOL DRINKING AND INCREASES BEHAVIORAL SENSITIVITY TO ALCOHOL SELECTIVELY IN MALE OFFSPRING. ALCOHOL USE DISORDER (AUD) IS HERITABLE, BUT THE GENETIC BASIS FOR THIS DISEASE REMAINS POORLY UNDERSTOOD. ALTHOUGH NUMEROUS GENE VARIANTS HAVE BEEN ASSOCIATED WITH AUD, THESE VARIANTS ACCOUNT FOR ONLY A SMALL FRACTION OF THE TOTAL RISK. THE IDEA OF INHERITANCE OF ACQUIRED CHARACTERISTICS, I.E. "EPIGENETIC INHERITANCE," IS RE-EMERGING AS A PROVEN ADJUNCT TO TRADITIONAL MODES OF GENETIC INHERITANCE. WE HYPOTHESIZED THAT ALCOHOL DRINKING AND NEUROBIOLOGICAL SENSITIVITY TO ALCOHOL ARE INFLUENCED BY ANCESTRAL ALCOHOL EXPOSURE. TO TEST THIS HYPOTHESIS, WE EXPOSED MALE MICE TO CHRONIC VAPOR ETHANOL OR CONTROL CONDITIONS, MATED THEM TO ETHANOL-NAIVE FEMALES, AND TESTED ADULT OFFSPRING FOR ETHANOL DRINKING, ETHANOL-INDUCED BEHAVIORS, GENE EXPRESSION, AND DNA METHYLATION. WE FOUND THAT ETHANOL-SIRED MALE OFFSPRING HAD REDUCED ETHANOL PREFERENCE AND CONSUMPTION, ENHANCED SENSITIVITY TO THE ANXIOLYTIC AND MOTOR-ENHANCING EFFECTS OF ETHANOL, AND INCREASED BDNF EXPRESSION IN THE VENTRAL TEGMENTAL AREA (VTA) COMPARED TO CONTROL-SIRED MALE OFFSPRING. THERE WERE NO DIFFERENCES AMONG ETHANOL- AND CONTROL-SIRED FEMALE OFFSPRING ON THESE ASSAYS. ETHANOL EXPOSURE ALSO DECREASED DNA METHYLATION AT THE BDNFAEPROMOTER OF SIRE'S GERM CELLS AND HYPOMETHYLATION WAS MAINTAINED IN THE VTA OF BOTH MALE AND FEMALE ETHANOL-SIRED OFFSPRING. OUR FINDINGS SHOW THAT PATERNAL ALCOHOL EXPOSURE IS A PREVIOUSLY UNRECOGNIZED REGULATOR OF ALCOHOL DRINKING AND BEHAVIORAL SENSITIVITY TO ALCOHOL IN MALE, BUT NOT FEMALE, OFFSPRING. PATERNAL ALCOHOL EXPOSURE ALSO INDUCES EPIGENETIC ALTERATIONS (DNA HYPOMETHYLATION) AND GENE EXPRESSION CHANGES THAT PERSIST IN THE VTA OF OFFSPRING. THESE RESULTS PROVIDE NEW INSIGHT INTO THE INHERITANCE AND DEVELOPMENT OF ALCOHOL DRINKING BEHAVIORS. 2014 2 909 49 CHRONIC EXPOSURE TO ETHANOL IN MALE MICE MAY BE ASSOCIATED WITH HEARING LOSS IN OFFSPRING. ALTHOUGH PATERNAL ETHANOL (ETOH) ABUSE HAS BEEN SHOWN TO AFFECT THE GROWTH AND BEHAVIOR OF OFFSPRING, THE EXACT MOLECULAR AND MECHANISTIC BASIS REMAINS LARGELY UNCLEAR. METHYLATION ALTERATIONS IN IMPRINTED GENES MAY BE RELATED TO WELL-DOCUMENTED TERATOGENIC EFFECTS OF ETHANOL. HERE WE SHOW THAT CHRONIC PATERNAL ETHANOL EXPOSURE INCREASES THE SUSCEPTIBILITY TO ABNORMAL BEHAVIOR IN OFFSPRING THROUGH MALE GAME EPIGENETIC ALTERATION. IN OUR STUDY, DIFFERENT DOSES OF ETHANOL (0, 1.1, 3.3 G KG-1 ) WERE ADMINISTERED INTRA-GASTRICALLY TO MALE MICE AND DECREASED SPERM MOTILITY WAS FOUND IN THE HIGHEST ETHANOL-EXPOSED GROUP COMPARED WITH THE CONTROLS. DATA ALSO SHOWED A DOSE-DEPENDENT INCREASE IN DEAF MICE OF THE PATERNALLY ETHANOL-EXPOSED GROUPS. THE METHYLATION OF H19, PEG3, NDN AND SNRPN WAS ASSESSED IN PATERNAL SPERMATOZOA AND IN THE CEREBRAL CORTICES OF DEAF MICE. ETOH AFFECTED METHYLATION OF PEG3 (CPG 3, 7 AND 9) IN PATERNAL SPERMATOZOA AND IN THE CEREBRAL CORTICES OF DEAF MICE, BUT THE LEVEL OF MRNA EXPRESSION DID NOT CHANGE, SUGGESTING THAT OTHER GENE REGULATION MAY BE INVOLVED IN THESE PROCESSES. OVERALL, CHRONIC PATERNAL ETHANOL EXPOSURE COULD ALTER THE METHYLATION OF IMPRINTED GENES IN SIRE SPERMATOZOA THAT COULD ALSO BE PASSED ON TO OFFSPRING, GIVING RISE TO DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS. OUR RESULTS PROVIDE POSSIBLE EPIGENETIC EVIDENCE FOR A PATERNAL ETHANOL EXPOSURE CONTRIBUTION TO FETAL ALCOHOL SYNDROME (FAS). 2015 3 5166 48 PRECONCEPTION PATERNAL ALCOHOL EXPOSURE EXERTS SEX-SPECIFIC EFFECTS ON OFFSPRING GROWTH AND LONG-TERM METABOLIC PROGRAMMING. BACKGROUND: ALTHOUGH CLINICAL DATA SUPPORT AN ASSOCIATION BETWEEN PATERNAL ALCOHOL USE AND DEFICITS IN CHILD NEUROCOGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT, THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PATERNAL DRINKING AND ALCOHOL-INDUCED GROWTH PHENOTYPES REMAINS CHALLENGING TO DEFINE. USING AN ESTABLISHED MOUSE MODEL OF CHRONIC EXPOSURE, PREVIOUS WORK BY OUR GROUP HAS LINKED PRECONCEPTION PATERNAL ALCOHOL USE TO SEX-SPECIFIC PATTERNS OF FETAL GROWTH RESTRICTION AND PLACENTAL DYSFUNCTION. THE AIM OF THE PRESENT STUDY WAS TO INVESTIGATE THE LONG-TERM IMPACT OF CHRONIC PRECONCEPTION PATERNAL ALCOHOL USE ON OFFSPRING GROWTH AND METABOLIC PROGRAMMING. RESULTS: PRECONCEPTION PATERNAL ALCOHOL EXPOSURE INDUCED A PROLONGED PERIOD OF FETAL GESTATION AND AN INCREASED INCIDENCE OF INTRAUTERINE GROWTH RESTRICTION, WHICH AFFECTED THE MALE OFFSPRING TO A GREATER EXTENT THAN THE FEMALES. WHILE THE FEMALE OFFSPRING OF ETHANOL-EXPOSED MALES WERE ABLE TO MATCH THE BODY WEIGHTS OF THE CONTROLS WITHIN THE FIRST 2 WEEKS OF POSTNATAL LIFE, MALE OFFSPRING CONTINUED TO DISPLAY AN 11% REDUCTION IN WEIGHT AT 5 WEEKS OF AGE AND A 6% REDUCTION AT 8 WEEKS OF AGE. THE OBSERVED GROWTH DEFICITS ASSOCIATED WITH INSULIN HYPERSENSITIVITY IN THE MALE OFFSPRING, WHILE IN CONTRAST, FEMALES DISPLAYED A MODEST LAG IN THEIR GLUCOSE TOLERANCE TEST. THESE METABOLIC DEFECTS WERE ASSOCIATED WITH AN UP-REGULATION OF GENES WITHIN THE PRO-FIBROTIC TGF-BETA SIGNALING PATHWAY AND INCREASED LEVELS OF CELLULAR HYDROXYPROLINE WITHIN THE LIVERS OF THE MALE OFFSPRING. WE OBSERVED SUPPRESSED CYTOKINE PROFILES WITHIN THE LIVER AND PANCREAS OF BOTH THE MALE AND FEMALE OFFSPRING, WHICH CORRELATED WITH THE UP-REGULATION OF GENES IN THE LIVERX/RETINOIDX/FARNESOIDX RECEPTOR PATHWAYS. HOWEVER, PATTERNS OF GENE EXPRESSION WERE HIGHLY VARIABLE BETWEEN THE OFFSPRING OF ALCOHOL-EXPOSED SIRES. IN THE ADULT OFFSPRING OF ALCOHOL-EXPOSED MALES, WE DID NOT OBSERVE ANY DIFFERENCES IN THE ALLELIC EXPRESSION OF IGF2 OR ANY OTHER IMPRINTED GENES. CONCLUSIONS: THE IMPACT OF PATERNAL ALCOHOL USE ON CHILD DEVELOPMENT IS POORLY EXPLORED AND REPRESENTS A SIGNIFICANT GAP IN OUR UNDERSTANDING OF THE TERATOGENIC EFFECTS OF ETHANOL. OUR STUDIES IMPLICATE PATERNAL EXPOSURE HISTORY AS AN ADDITIONAL AND IMPORTANT MODIFIER OF ALCOHOL-INDUCED GROWTH PHENOTYPES AND CHALLENGE THE CURRENT MATERNAL-CENTRIC EXPOSURE PARADIGM. 2019 4 586 31 BEHAVIOURAL AND EPIGENETIC EFFECTS OF PATERNAL EXPOSURE TO CANNABINOIDS DURING ADOLESCENCE ON OFFSPRING VULNERABILITY TO STRESS. CHRONIC CANNABINOID EXPOSURE DURING ADOLESCENCE IN MALE RATS INDUCES CHRONIC COGNITIVE AND EMOTIONAL IMPAIRMENTS. HOWEVER, THE IMPACT OF THIS FORM OF EXPOSURE ON OFFSPRING VULNERABILITY TO STRESS IS UNKNOWN. THE AIM OF THIS STUDY WAS TO EVALUATE THE BEHAVIOURAL AND EPIGENETIC EFFECTS OF STRESS IN THE OFFSPRING OF MALE RATS WHOSE FATHERS WERE EXPOSED TO CANNABINOIDS DURING ADOLESCENCE. MALE ADOLESCENT OFFSPRING OF WIN55,212-2 (1.2 MG/KG) TREATED RATS WERE EXPOSED DURING ONE WEEK TO VARIABLE STRESSORS AND SUBJECTED TO BEHAVIOURAL TESTS OF ANXIETY AND EPISODIC-LIKE MEMORY, FOLLOWED BY AN ASSESSMENT OF GLOBAL DNA METHYLATION AND EXPRESSION OF DNA METHYLTRANSFERASES ENZYMES DNMT1 AND DNMT3A MRNA IN THE PREFRONTAL CORTEX. STRESS EXPOSURE INDUCED A SIGNIFICANT ANXIOGENIC-LIKE EFFECT BUT DID NOT AFFECT THE EPISODIC-LIKE MEMORY IN THE OFFSPRING OF WIN55,212-2 EXPOSED FATHERS IN COMPARISON TO THE OFFSPRING OF NON-EXPOSED FATHERS. THESE BEHAVIOURAL CHANGES WERE SUBSEQUENT TO A SIGNIFICANT INCREASE IN GLOBAL DNA METHYLATION AND DNMT1 AND DNMTA3 TRANSCRIPTION IN THE PREFRONTAL CORTEX. THESE DATA SUGGEST THAT THE DELETERIOUS EFFECT OF CHRONIC EXPOSURE TO CANNABINOIDS DURING ADOLESCENCE ARE NOT LIMITED TO THE EXPOSED INDIVIDUALS BUT MAY INCREASE THE VULNERABILITY TO STRESS-INDUCED ANXIETY IN THE OFFSPRING AND ALTER THEIR EPIGENETIC PROGRAMMING. 2019 5 5177 49 PREFRONTAL CORTEX EXPRESSION OF CHROMATIN MODIFIER GENES IN MALE WSP AND WSR MICE CHANGES ACROSS ETHANOL DEPENDENCE, WITHDRAWAL, AND ABSTINENCE. ALCOHOL-USE DISORDER (AUD) IS A RELAPSING DISORDER ASSOCIATED WITH EXCESSIVE ETHANOL CONSUMPTION. RECENT STUDIES SUPPORT THE INVOLVEMENT OF EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF AUD. STUDIES CARRIED OUT SO FAR HAVE FOCUSED ON A FEW SPECIFIC EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS. THE GOAL OF THIS PROJECT WAS TO INVESTIGATE GENE EXPRESSION CHANGES OF EPIGENETIC REGULATORS THAT MEDIATE A BROAD ARRAY OF CHROMATIN MODIFICATIONS AFTER CHRONIC ALCOHOL EXPOSURE, CHRONIC ALCOHOL EXPOSURE FOLLOWED BY 8 H WITHDRAWAL, AND CHRONIC ALCOHOL EXPOSURE FOLLOWED BY 21 DAYS OF ABSTINENCE IN WITHDRAWAL-RESISTANT (WSR) AND WITHDRAWAL SEIZURE-PRONE (WSP) SELECTED MOUSE LINES. WE FOUND THAT CHRONIC VAPOR EXPOSURE TO HIGHLY INTOXICATING LEVELS OF ETHANOL ALTERS THE EXPRESSION OF SEVERAL CHROMATIN REMODELING GENES MEASURED BY QUANTITATIVE PCR ARRAY ANALYSES. THE IDENTIFIED EFFECTS WERE INDEPENDENT OF SELECTED LINES, WHICH, HOWEVER, DISPLAYED BASELINE DIFFERENCES IN EPIGENETIC GENE EXPRESSION. WE REPORTED DYSREGULATION IN THE EXPRESSION OF GENES INVOLVED IN HISTONE ACETYLATION, DEACETYLATION, LYSINE AND ARGININE METHYLATION AND UBIQUITINATIONHYLATION DURING CHRONIC ETHANOL EXPOSURE AND WITHDRAWAL, BUT NOT AFTER 21 DAYS OF ABSTINENCE. ETHANOL-INDUCED CHANGES ARE CONSISTENT WITH DECREASED HISTONE ACETYLATION AND WITH DECREASED DEPOSITION OF THE PERMISSIVE UBIQUITINATION MARK H2BK120UB, ASSOCIATED WITH REDUCED TRANSCRIPTION. ON THE OTHER HAND, ETHANOL-INDUCED CHANGES IN THE EXPRESSION OF GENES INVOLVED IN HISTONE LYSINE METHYLATION ARE CONSISTENT WITH INCREASED TRANSCRIPTION. THE NET RESULT OF THESE MODIFICATIONS ON GENE EXPRESSION IS LIKELY TO DEPEND ON THE COMBINATION OF THE SPECIFIC HISTONE TAIL MODIFICATIONS PRESENT AT A GIVEN TIME ON A GIVEN PROMOTER. SINCE ALCOHOL DOES NOT MODULATE GENE EXPRESSION UNIDIRECTIONALLY, IT IS NOT SURPRISING THAT ALCOHOL DOES NOT UNIDIRECTIONALLY ALTER CHROMATIN STRUCTURE TOWARD A CLOSED OR OPEN STATE, AS SUGGESTED BY THE RESULTS OF THIS STUDY. 2017 6 2472 40 EPIGENETIC TRANSMISSION OF THE IMPACT OF EARLY STRESS ACROSS GENERATIONS. BACKGROUND: TRAUMATIC EXPERIENCES IN EARLY LIFE ARE RISK FACTORS FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF BEHAVIORAL AND EMOTIONAL DISORDERS. SUCH DISORDERS CAN PERSIST THROUGH ADULTHOOD AND HAVE OFTEN BEEN REPORTED TO BE TRANSMITTED ACROSS GENERATIONS. METHODS: TO INVESTIGATE THE TRANSGENERATIONAL EFFECT OF EARLY STRESS, MICE WERE EXPOSED TO CHRONIC AND UNPREDICTABLE MATERNAL SEPARATION FROM POSTNATAL DAY 1 TO 14. RESULTS: WE SHOW THAT CHRONIC AND UNPREDICTABLE MATERNAL SEPARATION INDUCES DEPRESSIVE-LIKE BEHAVIORS AND ALTERS THE BEHAVIORAL RESPONSE TO AVERSIVE ENVIRONMENTS IN THE SEPARATED ANIMALS WHEN ADULT. MOST OF THE BEHAVIORAL ALTERATIONS ARE FURTHER EXPRESSED BY THE OFFSPRING OF MALES SUBJECTED TO MATERNAL SEPARATION, DESPITE THE FACT THAT THESE MALES ARE REARED NORMALLY. CHRONIC AND UNPREDICTABLE MATERNAL SEPARATION ALSO ALTERS THE PROFILE OF DNA METHYLATION IN THE PROMOTER OF SEVERAL CANDIDATE GENES IN THE GERMLINE OF THE SEPARATED MALES. COMPARABLE CHANGES IN DNA METHYLATION ARE ALSO PRESENT IN THE BRAIN OF THE OFFSPRING AND ARE ASSOCIATED WITH ALTERED GENE EXPRESSION. CONCLUSIONS: THESE FINDINGS HIGHLIGHT THE NEGATIVE IMPACT OF EARLY STRESS ON BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES ACROSS GENERATIONS AND ON THE REGULATION OF DNA METHYLATION IN THE GERMLINE. 2010 7 4930 51 PATERNAL ALCOHOL EXPOSURE REDUCES ACQUISITION OF OPERANT ALCOHOL SELF-ADMINISTRATION AND AFFECTS BDNF DNA METHYLATION IN MALE AND FEMALE OFFSPRING. FAMILIAL TRANSMISSION OF ALCOHOL USE DISORDER REFLECTS GENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS. PATERNAL ALCOHOL EXPOSURE MAY AFFECT RODENT OFFSPRING VIA EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS TRANSMITTED THROUGH THE MALE GERM LINE. WHILE SUCH EXPOSURE ALTERS ALCOHOL SENSITIVITY IN MOUSE OFFSPRING, NO STUDIES EXAMINED IF IT IMPACTS THE DEVELOPMENT OF OPERANT ALCOHOL SELF-ADMINISTRATION IN RATS. WE EXPOSED MALE (SIRES) WISTAR RATS TO CHRONIC INTERMITTENT ETHANOL IN VAPOUR CHAMBERS (16 H/DAY; 5 DAYS/WEEK) OR TO AIR FOR 6 WEEKS. EIGHT WEEKS LATER, RATS WERE MATED WITH ALCOHOL-NAIVE FEMALES. ADULT ALCOHOL- AND CONTROL-SIRED F1 OFFSPRING WERE ASSESSED IN ACQUISITION OF ALCOHOL SELF-ADMINISTRATION IN WHICH INCREASING ALCOHOL CONCENTRATIONS (2.5%, 5% AND 10%, V/V) WERE DELIVERED AFTER ONE LEVER PRESS (FIXED RATIO 1 OR FR1). PRIOR TO ALCOHOL SESSIONS, RATS WERE TRAINED TO LEVER PRESS FOR FOOD DELIVERY UNDER AN FR1 SCHEDULE OF REINFORCEMENT. DNA METHYLATION LEVELS OF THE BRAIN DERIVED NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR (BDNF) GENE WERE MEASURED IN SPERM, NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS (NAC) AND MEDIAL PREFRONTAL CORTEX (MPFC) IN SIRES AND IN OFFSPRING. ALCOHOL-EXPOSED SIRES HAD LOWER BDNF DNA METHYLATION LEVELS IN NAC AND GREATER METHYLATION LEVELS IN MPFC. ALTHOUGH THIS PATTERN WAS NOT RECAPITULATED IN OFFSPRING, ALCOHOL-SIRED OFFSPRING OF BOTH SEXES DID SHOW ABERRANT BDNF DNA METHYLATION PATTERNS COMPARED TO CONTROL-SIRED OFFSPRING. ALCOHOL-SIRED OFFSPRING SELF-ADMINISTERED LESS ALCOHOL (5% AND 10%) WITH NO GROUP DIFFERENCES IN FOOD RESPONDING. RESULTS INDICATE THAT PATERNAL ALCOHOL EXPOSURE PRIOR TO CONCEPTION PROTECTS AGAINST ALCOHOL'S INITIAL REINFORCING EFFECTS BUT THE PATTERN OF DYSREGULATED BDNF METHYLATION IN REWARD-RELATED CIRCUITRY DID NOT MIMIC CHANGES SEEN IN SIRES. 2022 8 1096 52 COINCUBATION OF SPERM WITH EPIDIDYMAL EXTRACELLULAR VESICLE PREPARATIONS FROM CHRONIC INTERMITTENT ETHANOL-TREATED MICE IS SUFFICIENT TO IMPART ANXIETY-LIKE AND ETHANOL-INDUCED BEHAVIORS TO ADULT PROGENY. WE PREVIOUSLY REPORTED THAT PATERNAL PRECONCEPTION CHRONIC ETHANOL EXPOSURE IN MICE IMPARTS ADULT MALE OFFSPRING WITH REDUCED ETHANOL DRINKING PREFERENCE AND CONSUMPTION, INCREASED ETHANOL SENSITIVITY, AND ATTENUATED STRESS RESPONSIVITY. THAT SAME CHRONIC ETHANOL EXPOSURE PARADIGM WAS LATER REVEALED TO AFFECT THE SPERM EPIGENOME BY ALTERING THE ABUNDANCE OF SEVERAL SMALL NONCODING RNAS, A MECHANISM THAT MEDIATES THE INTERGENERATIONAL EFFECTS OF NUMEROUS PATERNAL ENVIRONMENTAL EXPOSURES. ALTHOUGH RECENT STUDIES HAVE REVEALED THAT THE UNIQUE RNA SIGNATURE OF SPERM IS SHAPED DURING MATURATION IN THE EPIDIDYMIS VIA EXTRACELLULAR VESICLES (EVS), FORMAL DEMONSTRATION THAT EVS MEDIATE THE EFFECTS OF PATERNAL PRECONCEPTION PERTURBATIONS IS LACKING. THEREFORE, IN THE CURRENT STUDY WE TESTED THE HYPOTHESIS THAT EPIDIDYMAL EV PREPARATIONS ARE SUFFICIENT TO INDUCE INTERGENERATIONAL EFFECTS OF PATERNAL PRECONCEPTION ETHANOL EXPOSURE ON OFFSPRING. TO TEST THIS HYPOTHESIS, SPERM FROM ETHANOL-NAIVE DONORS WERE INCUBATED WITH EPIDIDYMAL EV PREPARATIONS FROM CHRONIC ETHANOL (ETHANOL EV-DONOR) OR CONTROL-TREATED (CONTROL EV-DONOR) MICE PRIOR TO IN VITRO FERTILIZATION (IVF) AND EMBRYO TRANSFER. PROGENY WERE EXAMINED FOR ETHANOL- AND STRESS-RELATED BEHAVIORS IN ADULTHOOD. ETHANOL EV-DONORS IMPARTED REDUCED BODY WEIGHT AT WEANING AND IMPARTED MODESTLY INCREASED LIMITED ACCESS ETHANOL INTAKE TO MALE OFFSPRING. ETHANOL-EV DONORS ALSO IMPARTED INCREASED BASAL ANXIETY-LIKE BEHAVIOR AND REDUCED SENSITIVITY TO ETHANOL-INDUCED ANXIOLYSIS TO FEMALE OFFSPRING. ALTHOUGH ETHANOL EV-DONOR TREATMENT DID NOT RECAPITULATE THE ETHANOL- OR STRESS-RELATED INTERGENERATIONAL EFFECTS OF PATERNAL ETHANOL FOLLOWING NATURAL MATING, THESE RESULTS DEMONSTRATE THAT COINCUBATION OF SPERM WITH EPIDIDYMAL EV PREPARATIONS IS SUFFICIENT TO IMPART INTERGENERATIONAL EFFECTS OF ETHANOL THROUGH THE MALE GERMLINE. THIS MECHANISM MAY GENERALIZE TO THE INTERGENERATIONAL EFFECTS OF A WIDE VARIETY OF PATERNAL PRECONCEPTION PERTURBATIONS. 2020 9 4943 64 PATERNAL PRECONCEPTION ALCOHOL EXPOSURE IMPARTS INTERGENERATIONAL ALCOHOL-RELATED BEHAVIORS TO MALE OFFSPRING ON A PURE C57BL/6J BACKGROUND. WHILE ALCOHOL USE DISORDER (AUD) IS A HIGHLY HERITABLE CONDITION, THE BASIS OF AUD IN FAMILIES WITH A HISTORY OF ALCOHOLISM IS DIFFICULT TO EXPLAIN BY GENETIC VARIATION ALONE. EMERGING EVIDENCE SUGGESTS THAT PARENTAL EXPERIENCE PRIOR TO CONCEPTION CAN AFFECT INHERITANCE OF COMPLEX BEHAVIORS IN OFFSPRING VIA NON-GENOMIC (EPIGENETIC) MECHANISMS. FOR INSTANCE, MALE C57BL/6J (B6) MICE EXPOSED TO CHRONIC INTERMITTENT VAPOR ETHANOL (CIE) PRIOR TO MATING WITH STRAIN 129S1/SVIMJ ETHANOL-NAIVE FEMALES PRODUCE MALE OFFSPRING WITH REDUCED ETHANOL-DRINKING PREFERENCE, INCREASED ETHANOL SENSITIVITY, AND INCREASED BRAIN-DERIVED NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR (BDNF) EXPRESSION IN THE VENTRAL TEGMENTAL AREA (VTA). IN THE PRESENT STUDY, WE TESTED THE HYPOTHESIS THAT THESE INTERGENERATIONAL EFFECTS OF PATERNAL CIE ARE REPRODUCIBLE IN MALE OFFSPRING ON AN INBRED B6 BACKGROUND. TO THIS END, B6 MALES WERE EXPOSED TO 6 WEEKS OF CIE (OR ROOM AIR AS A CONTROL) BEFORE MATING WITH ETHANOL-NAIVE B6 FEMALES TO PRODUCE ETHANOL (E)-SIRED AND CONTROL (C)-SIRED MALE AND FEMALE OFFSPRING. WE OBSERVED A SEX-SPECIFIC EFFECT, AS E-SIRED MALES EXHIBITED DECREASED TWO-BOTTLE FREE-CHOICE ETHANOL-DRINKING PREFERENCE, INCREASED SENSITIVITY TO THE ANXIOLYTIC EFFECTS OF ETHANOL, AND INCREASED VTA BDNF EXPRESSION; NO DIFFERENCES WERE OBSERVED IN FEMALE OFFSPRING. THESE FINDINGS CONFIRM AND EXTEND OUR PREVIOUS RESULTS BY DEMONSTRATING THAT THE EFFECTS OF PATERNAL PRECONCEPTION ETHANOL ARE REPRODUCIBLE USING GENETICALLY IDENTICAL, INBRED B6 ANIMALS. 2017 10 3714 41 INHERITANCE OF SOCIAL DOMINANCE IS ASSOCIATED WITH GLOBAL SPERM DNA METHYLATION IN INBRED MALE MICE. DOMINANCE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN MALES AND THEIR ASSOCIATED TRAITS ARE USUALLY HERITABLE AND HAVE IMPLICATIONS FOR SEXUAL SELECTION IN ANIMALS. IN PARTICULAR, SOCIAL DOMINANCE AND ITS RELATED MALE PHEROMONES ARE HERITABLE IN INBRED MICE; THUS, WE WONDERED WHETHER EPIGENETIC CHANGES DUE TO ALTERED LEVELS OF DNA METHYLATION DETERMINE INHERITANCE. HERE, WE USED C57BL/6 MALE MICE TO ESTABLISH A SOCIAL DOMINANCE-SUBORDINATION RELATIONSHIP THROUGH CHRONIC DYADIC ENCOUNTERS, AND THIS RELATIONSHIP AND PHEROMONE COVARIATION OCCURRED IN THEIR OFFSPRING, INDICATIVE OF HERITABILITY. THROUGH TRANSCRIPTOME SEQUENCING AND WHOLE-GENOME DNA METHYLATION PROFILING OF THE SPERM OF BOTH GENERATIONS, WE FOUND THAT DIFFERENTIAL METHYLATION OF MANY GENES WAS INDUCED BY SOCIAL DOMINANCE-SUBORDINATION IN SIRES AND COULD BE PASSED ON TO THE OFFSPRING. THESE METHYLATED GENES WERE MAINLY RELATED TO GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT PROCESSES, NEURODEVELOPMENT, AND CELLULAR TRANSPORTATION. THE EXPRESSION OF THE GENES WITH SIMILAR FUNCTIONS IN WHOLE-GENOME METHYLATION/BISULFITE SEQUENCING WAS ALSO DIFFERENTIATED BY SOCIAL DOMINANCE-SUBORDINATION, AS REVEALED BY RNA-SEQ. IN PARTICULAR, THE GENE DENND1A, WHICH REGULATES NEURAL SIGNALING, WAS DIFFERENTIALLY METHYLATED AND EXPRESSED IN THE SPERM AND MEDIAL PREFRONTAL CORTEX IN PAIRED MALES BEFORE AND AFTER DOMINANCE-SUBORDINATION ESTABLISHMENT, SUGGESTING THE POTENTIAL EPIGENETIC CONTROL AND INHERITANCE OF SOCIAL DOMINANCE-RELATED AGGRESSION. WE SUGGEST THAT SOCIAL DOMINANCE MIGHT BE PASSED ON TO MALE OFFSPRING THROUGH SPERM DNA METHYLATION AND THAT THE DIFFERENCES COULD POTENTIALLY AFFECT MALE COMPETITION IN OFFSPRING BY AFFECTING THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM. 2023 11 1804 42 EFFECT OF RAT PARENTAL MORPHINE EXPOSURE ON PASSIVE AVOIDANCE MEMORY AND MORPHINE CONDITIONED PLACE PREFERENCE IN MALE OFFSPRING. DRUG ADDICTION IS A CHRONIC DISORDER RESULTED FROM COMPLEX INTERACTION OF GENETIC, ENVIRONMENTAL, AND DEVELOPMENTAL FACTORS. EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS PLAY AN IMPORTANT ROLE IN THE DEVELOPMENT AND MAINTENANCE OF ADDICTION AND ALSO MEMORY FORMATION IN THE BRAIN. WE HAVE EXAMINED PASSIVE AVOIDANCE MEMORY AND MORPHINE CONDITIONED PLACE PREFERENCE (CPP) IN THE OFFSPRING OF MALE AND/OR FEMALE RATS WITH A HISTORY OF ADULTHOOD MORPHINE CONSUMPTION. ADULT MALE AND FEMALE ANIMALS RECEIVED CHRONIC ORAL MORPHINE FOR 21DAYS AND THEN WERE MAINTAINED DRUG FREE FOR 10DAYS. AFTER THAT, THEY WERE LET TO MATE WITH EITHER AN ABSTINENT OR CONTROL RAT. MALE OFFSPRING'S MEMORY WAS EVALUATED BY STEP THROUGH TEST. BESIDES, REWARDING EFFECTS OF MORPHINE WERE CHECKED WITH CCP PARADIGM. OFFSPRING OF ABSTINENT ANIMALS SHOWED SIGNIFICANT MEMORY IMPAIRMENT COMPARED TO THE CONTROL GROUP WHICH WAS MORE PROMINENT IN THE OFFSPRING OF ABSTINENT FEMALES. CONDITIONING RESULTS SHOWED THAT ADMINISTRATION OF A HIGH DOSE OF MORPHINE (10MG/KG) THAT COULD SIGNIFICANTLY INDUCE CPP IN CONTROL RATS, WAS NOT ABLE TO INDUCE SIMILAR RESULTS IN THE OFFSPRING OF MORPHINE ABSTINENT PARENTS; AND CPP WAS MUCH MORE PROMINENT WHEN IT WAS INDUCED IN THE OFFSPRING OF MORPHINE EXPOSED FEMALES COMPARED TO THE PROGENY OF MORPHINE EXPOSED MALES. IT IS CONCLUDED THAT PARENTAL MORPHINE CONSUMPTION IN ADULTHOOD EVEN BEFORE MATING HAS DESTRUCTIVE EFFECTS ON MEMORY STATE OF THE MALE OFFSPRING AND ALSO LEADS TO TOLERANCE TO THE REWARDING EFFECTS OF MORPHINE. THESE EFFECTS ARE GREATER WHEN THE MORPHINE CONSUMER PARENT IS THE FEMALE ONE. 2018 12 3042 44 GENOME-WIDE ALTERATION OF HISTONE METHYLATION PROFILES ASSOCIATED WITH COGNITIVE CHANGES IN RESPONSE TO DEVELOPMENTAL ARSENIC EXPOSURE IN MICE. INORGANIC ARSENIC IS A XENOBIOTIC ENTERING THE BODY PRIMARILY THROUGH CONTAMINATED DRINKING WATER AND FOOD. THERE ARE DEFINED MECHANISMS THAT DESCRIBE ARSENIC'S ASSOCIATION WITH INCREASED CANCER INCIDENCE, HOWEVER MECHANISMS EXPLAINING ARSENIC EXPOSURE AND NEURODEVELOPMENTAL OR AGING DISORDERS ARE POORLY DEFINED. IN RECENT YEARS, ARSENIC EFFECTS ON EPIGENOME HAVE BECOME A PARTICULAR FOCUS. WE HYPOTHESIZE THAT HUMAN RELEVANT ARSENIC EXPOSURE DURING PARTICULAR DEVELOPMENTAL WINDOWS, OR LONG-TERM EXPOSURE LATER IN LIFE INDUCE PATHOPHYSIOLOGICAL NEURAL CHANGES THROUGH EPIGENOMIC ALTERATIONS, IN PARTICULAR HISTONE METHYLATION PROFILE, MANIFESTING AS COGNITIVE DECLINE. C57BL/6 WILD-TYPE MICE WERE CONTINUALLY EXPOSED TO SODIUM ARSENITE (100 MICROG/L) IN DRINKING WATER PRIOR TO MATING THROUGH WEANING OF THE EXPERIMENTAL PROGENY. A SECOND COHORT OF AGED APP/PS MICE WERE CHRONICALLY EXPOSED TO THE SAME LEVEL OF ARSENIC. COGNITIVE TESTING, HISTOLOGICAL EXAMINATION OF BRAINS AND GENOME-WIDE METHYLATION LEVELS OF H3K4ME3 AND H3K27ME3 EXAMINED AFTER CHIP-SEQ WERE USED TO DETERMINE THE EFFECTS OF ARSENIC EXPOSURE. DEVELOPMENTAL ARSENIC EXPOSURE CAUSED SIGNIFICANTLY DIMINISHED COGNITION IN WILD-TYPE MICE. THE ANALYSIS OF CHIP-SEQ DATA AND EXPERIMENTS WITH MOUSE EMBRYONIC STEM CELLS DEMONSTRATED THAT EPIGENETIC CHANGES INDUCED BY ARSENIC EXPOSURE TRANSLATED INTO GENE EXPRESSION ALTERATIONS ASSOCIATED WITH NEURONAL DEVELOPMENT AND NEUROLOGICAL DISEASE. INCREASED HIPPOCAMPAL AMYLOID PLAQUES LEVELS OF APP/PS MICE AND COGNITIVE DECLINE PROVIDED EVIDENCE THAT ARSENIC EXPOSURE AGGRAVATED AN EXISTING ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE-LIKE PHENOTYPE. WE SHOW DEVELOPMENTAL ARSENIC EXPOSURE SIGNIFICANTLY IMPACTS HISTONE MODIFICATIONS IN BRAIN WHICH REMAIN PRESENT INTO ADULTHOOD AND PROVIDE A POTENTIAL MECHANISM BY WHICH DEVELOPMENTAL ARSENIC EXPOSURE INFLUENCES COGNITIVE FUNCTIONS. WE ALSO SHOW THAT HUMAN RELEVANT, CHRONIC ARSENIC EXPOSURE HAS DELETERIOUS EFFECTS ON ADULT APP/PS MICE AND EXACERBATES EXISTING ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE-LIKE SYMPTOMS. THE RESULTS DEMONSTRATE HOW DEVELOPMENTAL ARSENIC EXPOSURE IMPACTS THE BRAIN EPIGENOME, LEADING TO ALTERED GENE EXPRESSION LATER IN LIFE. 2022 13 1609 43 DNA METHYLATION-INDEPENDENT GROWTH RESTRICTION AND ALTERED DEVELOPMENTAL PROGRAMMING IN A MOUSE MODEL OF PRECONCEPTION MALE ALCOHOL EXPOSURE. THE PRECONCEPTION ENVIRONMENT IS A SIGNIFICANT MODIFIER OF DYSGENESIS AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF ENVIRONMENTALLY-INDUCED DISEASE. TO DATE, FETAL ALCOHOL SPECTRUM DISORDERS (FASDS) HAVE BEEN EXCLUSIVELY ASSOCIATED WITH MATERNAL EXPOSURES, YET EMERGING EVIDENCE SUGGESTS MALE-INHERITED ALTERATIONS IN THE DEVELOPMENTAL PROGRAM OF SPERM MAY BE RELEVANT TO THE GROWTH-RESTRICTION PHENOTYPES OF THIS CONDITION. USING A MOUSE MODEL OF VOLUNTARY CONSUMPTION, WE FIND CHRONIC PRECONCEPTION MALE ETHANOL EXPOSURE ASSOCIATES WITH FETAL GROWTH RESTRICTION, DECREASED PLACENTAL EFFICIENCY, ABNORMALITIES IN CHOLESTEROL TRAFFICKING, SEX-SPECIFIC ALTERATIONS IN THE GENETIC PATHWAYS REGULATING HEPATIC FIBROSIS, AND DISRUPTIONS IN THE REGULATION OF IMPRINTED GENES. ALTERATIONS IN THE DNA METHYLATION PROFILES OF IMPRINTED LOCI HAVE BEEN IDENTIFIED IN CLINICAL STUDIES OF ALCOHOLIC SPERM, SUGGESTING THE LEGACY OF PATERNAL DRINKING MAY TRANSMIT VIA HERITABLE DISRUPTIONS IN THE REGULATION OF IMPRINTED GENES. HOWEVER, THE CAPACITY OF SPERM-INHERITED CHANGES IN DNA METHYLATION TO BROADLY TRANSMIT ENVIRONMENTALLY-INDUCED PHENOTYPES REMAINS UNCONFIRMED. USING BISULPHITE MUTAGENESIS AND SECOND-GENERATION DEEP SEQUENCING, WE FIND NO EVIDENCE TO SUGGEST THAT THESE PHENOTYPES OR ANY OF THE ASSOCIATED TRANSCRIPTIONAL CHANGES ARE LINKED TO ALTERATIONS IN THE SPERM-INHERITED DNA METHYLATION PROFILE. THESE OBSERVATIONS ARE CONSISTENT WITH RECENT STUDIES EXAMINING THE MALE TRANSMISSION OF DIET-INDUCED PHENOTYPES AND EMPHASIZE THE IMPORTANCE OF EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS OF PATERNAL INHERITANCE BEYOND DNA METHYLATION. THIS STUDY CHALLENGES THE SINGULAR IMPORTANCE OF MATERNAL ALCOHOL EXPOSURES AND SUGGESTS PATERNAL ALCOHOL ABUSE IS A SIGNIFICANT, YET OVERLOOKED EPIDEMIOLOGICAL FACTOR COMPLICIT IN THE GENESIS OF ALCOHOL-INDUCED GROWTH DEFECTS, AND MAY PROVIDE MECHANISTIC INSIGHT INTO THE FAILURE OF FASD CHILDREN TO THRIVE POSTNATALLY. 2017 14 3215 48 HEAVY CHRONIC INTERMITTENT ETHANOL EXPOSURE ALTERS SMALL NONCODING RNAS IN MOUSE SPERM AND EPIDIDYMOSOMES. WHILE THE RISKS OF MATERNAL ALCOHOL ABUSE DURING PREGNANCY ARE WELL-ESTABLISHED, SEVERAL PRECLINICAL STUDIES SUGGEST THAT CHRONIC PRECONCEPTION ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION BY EITHER PARENT MAY ALSO HAVE SIGNIFICANCE CONSEQUENCES FOR OFFSPRING HEALTH AND DEVELOPMENT. NOTABLY, SINCE ISOGENIC MALE MICE USED IN THESE STUDIES ARE NOT INVOLVED IN GESTATION OR REARING OF OFFSPRING, THE CROSS-GENERATIONAL EFFECTS OF PATERNAL ALCOHOL EXPOSURE SUGGEST A GERMLINE-BASED EPIGENETIC MECHANISM. MANY RECENT STUDIES HAVE DEMONSTRATED THAT THE EFFECTS OF PATERNAL ENVIRONMENTAL EXPOSURES SUCH AS STRESS OR MALNUTRITION CAN BE TRANSMITTED TO THE NEXT GENERATION VIA ALTERATIONS TO SMALL NONCODING RNAS IN SPERM. THEREFORE, WE USED HIGH THROUGHPUT SEQUENCING TO EXAMINE THE EFFECT OF PRECONCEPTION ETHANOL ON SMALL NONCODING RNAS IN SPERM. WE FOUND THAT CHRONIC INTERMITTENT ETHANOL EXPOSURE ALTERED SEVERAL SMALL NONCODING RNAS FROM THREE OF THE MAJOR SMALL RNA CLASSES IN SPERM, TRNA-DERIVED SMALL RNA (TDR), MITOCHONDRIAL SMALL RNA, AND MICRORNA. SIX OF THE ETHANOL-RESPONSIVE SMALL NONCODING RNAS WERE EVALUATED WITH RT-QPCR ON A SEPARATE COHORT OF MICE AND FIVE OF THE SIX WERE CONFIRMED TO BE ALTERED BY CHRONIC ETHANOL EXPOSURE, SUPPORTING THE VALIDITY OF THE SEQUENCING RESULTS. IN ADDITION TO ALTERED SPERM RNA ABUNDANCE, CHRONIC ETHANOL EXPOSURE AFFECTED POST-TRANSCRIPTIONAL MODIFICATIONS TO SPERM SMALL NONCODING RNAS, INCREASING TWO NUCLEOSIDE MODIFICATIONS PREVIOUSLY IDENTIFIED IN MITOCHONDRIAL TRNA. FURTHERMORE, WE FOUND THAT CHRONIC ETHANOL REDUCED EPIDIDYMAL EXPRESSION OF A TRNA METHYLTRANSFERASE, NSUN2, KNOWN TO DIRECTLY REGULATE TDR BIOGENESIS. FINALLY, ETHANOL-RESPONSIVE SPERM TDR ARE SIMILARLY ALTERED IN EXTRACELLULAR VESICLES OF THE EPIDIDYMIS (I.E., EPIDIDYMOSOMES), SUPPORTING THE HYPOTHESIS THAT ALTERATIONS TO SPERM TDR EMERGE IN THE EPIDIDYMIS AND THAT EPIDIDYMOSOMES ARE THE PRIMARY SOURCE OF SMALL NONCODING RNAS IN SPERM. THESE RESULTS ADD CHRONIC ETHANOL TO THE GROWING LIST OF PATERNAL EXPOSURES THAT CAN AFFECT SMALL NONCODING RNA ABUNDANCE AND NUCLEOSIDE MODIFICATIONS IN SPERM. AS SMALL NONCODING RNAS IN SPERM HAVE BEEN SHOWN TO CAUSALLY INDUCE HERITABLE PHENOTYPES IN OFFSPRING, ADDITIONAL RESEARCH IS WARRANTED TO UNDERSTAND THE POTENTIAL EFFECTS OF ETHANOL-RESPONSIVE SPERM SMALL NONCODING RNAS ON OFFSPRING HEALTH AND DEVELOPMENT. 2018 15 2089 36 EPIGENETIC DYSREGULATION OF THE DOPAMINE SYSTEM IN DIET-INDUCED OBESITY. CHRONIC INTAKE OF HIGH-FAT (HF) DIET IS KNOWN TO ALTER BRAIN NEUROTRANSMITTER SYSTEMS THAT PARTICIPATE IN THE CENTRAL REGULATION OF FOOD INTAKE. DOPAMINE (DA) SYSTEM CHANGES IN RESPONSE TO HF DIET HAVE BEEN OBSERVED IN THE HYPOTHALAMUS, IMPORTANT IN THE HOMEOSTATIC CONTROL OF FOOD INTAKE, AS WELL AS WITHIN THE CENTRAL REWARD CIRCUITRY [VENTRAL TEGMENTAL AREA (VTA), NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS (NAC), AND PRE-FRONTAL CORTEX (PFC)], CRITICAL FOR CODING THE REWARDING PROPERTIES OF PALATABLE FOOD AND IMPORTANT IN HEDONICALLY DRIVEN FEEDING BEHAVIOR. USING A MOUSE MODEL OF DIET-INDUCED OBESITY (DIO), SIGNIFICANT ALTERATIONS IN THE EXPRESSION OF DA-RELATED GENES WERE DOCUMENTED IN ADULT ANIMALS, AND THE GENERAL PATTERN OF GENE EXPRESSION CHANGES WAS OPPOSITE WITHIN THE HYPOTHALAMUS VERSUS THE REWARD CIRCUITRY (INCREASED VS. DECREASED, RESPECTIVELY). DIFFERENTIAL DNA METHYLATION WAS IDENTIFIED WITHIN THE PROMOTER REGIONS OF TYROSINE HYDROXYLASE (TH) AND DOPAMINE TRANSPORTER (DAT), AND THE PATTERN OF THIS RESPONSE WAS CONSISTENT WITH THE PATTERN OF GENE EXPRESSION. BEHAVIORS CONSISTENT WITH INCREASED HYPOTHALAMIC DA AND DECREASED REWARD CIRCUITRY DA WERE OBSERVED. THESE DATA IDENTIFY DIFFERENTIAL DNA METHYLATION AS AN EPIGENETIC MECHANISM LINKING THE CHRONIC INTAKE OF HF DIET WITH ALTERED DA-RELATED GENE EXPRESSION, AND THIS RESPONSE VARIES BY BRAIN REGION AND DNA SEQUENCE. 2012 16 1418 43 DIFFERENCES IN DNA METHYLATION REPROGRAMMING UNDERLIE THE SEXUAL DIMORPHISM OF BEHAVIORAL DISORDER CAUSED BY PRENATAL STRESS IN RATS. PRENATAL STRESS (PS) CAN LEAD TO NEUROENDOCRINE AND EMOTIONAL DISORDERS LATER IN ADOLESCENCE. SEXUAL DIMORPHISM IN THESE NEURODEVELOPMENTAL OUTCOMES HAVE BEEN OBSERVED; HOWEVER, THE UNDERLYING MECHANISMS ARE NOT FULLY UNDERSTOOD. TO ADDRESS THIS ISSUE, WE INVESTIGATED WHETHER THERE ARE SEX DIFFERENCES IN EPIGENETIC REPROGRAMMING IN RATS EXPOSED TO PS. PREGNANT FEMALE RATS WERE SUBJECTED TO CHRONIC RESTRAINT STRESS FROM GESTATIONAL DAY (G)12 TO G18. FROM POSTNATAL DAY (P)38 TO P45, SUBGROUPS OF OFFSPRING INCLUDING BOTH MALES AND FEMALES WERE SUBJECTED TO BEHAVIORAL TESTING AND BRAIN TISSUE SPECIMENS WERE ANALYZED BY DNA PYROSEQUENCING, WESTERN BLOTTING, AND GOLGI STAINING TO ASSESS CHANGES IN METHYLATION PATTERN OF GLUCOCORTICOID RECEPTOR (GR) GENE, EXPRESSION OF DNA METHYLTRANSFERASE (DNMT) AND DNA DEMETHYLASE, AND DENDRITE MORPHOLOGY, RESPECTIVELY. THE DNA METHYLTRANSFERASE INHIBITOR DECITABINE WAS ADMINISTERED TO RATS PRIOR TO PS TO FURTHER EVALUATE THE ROLE OF METHYLATION IN THE SEXUALLY DIMORPHIC EFFECTS OF PS. THE RESULTS SHOWED THAT PS INCREASED ANXIETY-LIKE BEHAVIOR IN OFFSPRING, ESPECIALLY IN FEMALES, WHILE DEPRESSION-LIKE BEHAVIOR WAS INCREASED IN MALE OFFSPRING COMPARED TO CONTROL LITTERMATES. THE METHYLATION PATTERN IN THE PROMOTER REGION OF THE GR GENE DIFFERED BETWEEN MALES AND FEMALES. SEX-SPECIFIC CHANGES IN THE EXPRESSION OF DNMTS (DNMT1 AND DNMT3A) AND DNA DEMETHYLASE (TET METHYLCYTOSINE DIOXYGENASE 2) WERE ALSO OBSERVED. INTERESTINGLY, DECITABINE ALLEVIATED THE BEHAVIORAL DISORDER CAUSED BY PS AND RESTORED DENDRITE DENSITY AND MORPHOLOGY IN FEMALE BUT NOT MALE RATS. THESE FINDINGS SUGGEST THAT DIFFERENT CHANGE PATTERNS OF DNMT AND DEMETHYLASE IN THE TWO SEXES AFTER PS ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE SEXUALLY DIMORPHISM, WHICH COULD HAVE IMPLICATIONS FOR THE CLINICAL MANAGEMENT OF STRESS-RELATED DISORDERS. 2020 17 2156 45 EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS ARE INVOLVED IN THE REGULATION OF ETHANOL CONSUMPTION IN MICE. BACKGROUND: REPEATED ALCOHOL EXPOSURE IS KNOWN TO INCREASE SUBSEQUENT ETHANOL CONSUMPTION IN MICE. HOWEVER, THE UNDERLYING MECHANISMS HAVE NOT BEEN FULLY ELUCIDATED. ONE POSTULATED MECHANISM INVOLVES EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS, INCLUDING HISTONE MODIFICATIONS AND DNA METHYLATION OF RELEVANT GENES SUCH AS NR2B OR BDNF. METHODS: TO INVESTIGATE THE ROLE OF EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF ALCOHOL DRINKING BEHAVIOR, AN ESTABLISHED CHRONIC INTERMITTENT ETHANOL EXPOSURE REINFORCED ETHANOL DRINKING MOUSE MODEL WITH VAPOR INHALATION OVER TWO 9-DAY TREATMENT REGIMENS WAS USED. THE DNA METHYLTRANSFERASE INHIBITOR, 5-AZACYTIDINE OR THE HISTONE DEACETYLASE INHIBITOR, TRICHOSTATIN A WAS ADMINISTERED (INTRAPERITONEALLY) TO C57BL/6 MICE 30 MIN BEFORE DAILY EXPOSURE TO CHRONIC INTERMITTENT ETHANOL. CHANGES IN ETHANOL CONSUMPTION WERE MEASURED USING THE 2-BOTTLE CHOICE TEST. RESULTS: THE RESULTS INDICATED THAT SYSTEMIC ADMINISTRATION OF TRICHOSTATIN A (2.5 MICROG/G) FACILITATED CHRONIC INTERMITTENT ETHANOL-INDUCED ETHANOL DRINKING, BUT SYSTEMIC ADMINISTRATION OF 5-AZACYTIDINE (2 MICROG/G) DID NOT CAUSE THE SAME EFFECT. HOWEVER, WHEN 5-AZACYTIDINE WAS ADMINISTERED BY INTRACEREBROVENTRICULAR INJECTION, IT FACILITATED CHRONIC INTERMITTENT ETHANOL-INDUCED ETHANOL DRINKING. FURTHERMORE, THE INCREASED DRINKING CAUSED BY CHRONIC INTERMITTENT ETHANOL WAS PREVENTED BY INJECTION OF A METHYL DONOR, S-ADENOSYL-L-METHIONINE. TO PROVIDE EVIDENCE THAT CHRONIC INTERMITTENT ETHANOL- OR TRICHOSTATIN A-INDUCED DNA DEMETHYLATION AND HISTONE MODIFICATIONS OF THE NR2B PROMOTER MAY UNDERLIE THE ALTERED ETHANOL CONSUMPTION, WE EXAMINED EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS AND NR2B EXPRESSION IN THE PREFRONTAL CORTEX OF THESE MICE. CHRONIC INTERMITTENT ETHANOL OR TRICHOSTATIN A DECREASED DNA METHYLATION AND INCREASED HISTONE ACETYLATION IN THE NR2B GENE PROMOTER, AS WELL AS MRNA LEVELS OF NR2B IN THESE MICE. CONCLUSIONS: TAKEN TOGETHER, THESE RESULTS INDICATE THAT EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS ARE INVOLVED IN REGULATING ETHANOL DRINKING BEHAVIOR, PARTIALLY THROUGH ALTERING NR2B EXPRESSION. 2014 18 4949 38 PATERNAL TRANSMISSION OF STRESS-INDUCED PATHOLOGIES. BACKGROUND: THERE HAS BEEN RECENT INTEREST IN THE POSSIBILITY THAT EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS MIGHT CONTRIBUTE TO THE TRANSGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION OF STRESS-INDUCED VULNERABILITY. HERE, WE FOCUSED ON POSSIBLE PATERNAL TRANSMISSION WITH THE SOCIAL DEFEAT STRESS PARADIGM. METHODS: ADULT MALE MICE EXPOSED TO CHRONIC SOCIAL DEFEAT STRESS OR CONTROL NONDEFEATED MICE WERE BRED WITH NORMAL FEMALE MICE, AND THEIR OFFSPRING WERE ASSESSED BEHAVIORALLY FOR DEPRESSIVE- AND ANXIETY-LIKE MEASURES. PLASMA LEVELS OF CORTICOSTERONE AND VASCULAR ENDOTHELIAL GROWTH FACTOR WERE ALSO ASSAYED. TO DIRECTLY ASSESS THE ROLE OF EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS, WE USED IN VITRO FERTILIZATION (IVF); BEHAVIORAL ASSESSMENTS WERE CONDUCTED ON OFFSPRING OF MICE FROM IVF-CONTROL AND IVF-DEFEATED FATHERS. RESULTS: WE SHOW THAT BOTH MALE AND FEMALE OFFSPRING FROM DEFEATED FATHERS EXHIBIT INCREASED MEASURES OF SEVERAL DEPRESSION- AND ANXIETY-LIKE BEHAVIORS. THE MALE OFFSPRING OF DEFEATED FATHERS ALSO DISPLAY INCREASED BASELINE PLASMA LEVELS OF CORTICOSTERONE AND DECREASED LEVELS OF VASCULAR ENDOTHELIAL GROWTH FACTOR. HOWEVER, MOST OF THESE BEHAVIORAL CHANGES WERE NOT OBSERVED WHEN OFFSPRING WERE GENERATED THROUGH IVF. CONCLUSIONS: THESE RESULTS SUGGEST THAT, ALTHOUGH BEHAVIORAL ADAPTATIONS THAT OCCUR AFTER CHRONIC SOCIAL DEFEAT STRESS CAN BE TRANSMITTED FROM THE FATHER TO HIS MALE AND FEMALE F1 PROGENY, ONLY VERY SUBTLE CHANGES MIGHT BE TRANSMITTED EPIGENETICALLY UNDER THE CONDITIONS TESTED. 2011 19 2013 38 EPIGENETIC BASIS OF THE DARK SIDE OF ALCOHOL ADDICTION. ALCOHOLISM IS A COMPLEX BRAIN DISEASE CHARACTERIZED BY THREE DISTINCT STAGES OF THE ADDICTION CYCLE THAT MANIFEST AS NEUROADAPTIVE CHANGES IN THE BRAIN. ONE SUCH STAGE OF THE ADDICTION CYCLE IS ALCOHOL WITHDRAWAL AND THE NEGATIVE AFFECTIVE STATES THAT PROMOTE DRINKING AND MAINTAIN ADDICTION. REPEATED ALCOHOL USE, GENETIC PREDISPOSITION TO ALCOHOLISM AND ANXIETY, AND ALCOHOL EXPOSURE DURING CRUCIAL DEVELOPMENTAL PERIODS ALL CONTRIBUTE TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF ALCOHOL-INDUCED WITHDRAWAL AND NEGATIVE AFFECTIVE SYMPTOMS. EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS WITHIN THE AMYGDALA HAVE PROVIDED A MOLECULAR BASIS OF THESE NEGATIVE AFFECTIVE SYMPTOMS, ALSO KNOWN AS THE DARK SIDE OF ADDICTION. HERE, WE PROPOSE THAT ALLOSTATIC CHANGE WITHIN THE EPIGENOME IN THE AMYGDALA IS A PRIME MECHANISM OF THE BIOLOGICAL BASIS OF NEGATIVE AFFECTIVE STATES RESULTING FROM, AND CONTRIBUTING TO, ALCOHOLISM. ACUTE ALCOHOL EXPOSURE PRODUCES AN ANXIOLYTIC RESPONSE WHICH IS ASSOCIATED WITH THE OPENING OF CHROMATIN DUE TO INCREASED HISTONE ACETYLATION, INCREASED CREB BINDING PROTEIN (CBP) LEVELS, AND HISTONE DEACETYLASE (HDAC) INHIBITION. AFTER CHRONIC ETHANOL EXPOSURE, THESE CHANGES RETURN TO BASELINE ALONG WITH ANXIETY-LIKE BEHAVIORS. HOWEVER, DURING WITHDRAWAL, HISTONE ACETYLATION DECREASES DUE TO INCREASED HDAC ACTIVITY AND DECREASED CBP LEVELS IN THE AMYGDALA CIRCUITRY LEADING TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF ANXIETY-LIKE BEHAVIORS. ADDITIONALLY, INNATELY HIGHER EXPRESSION OF THE HDAC2 ISOFORM LEADS TO A DEFICIT IN GLOBAL AND GENE-SPECIFIC HISTONE ACETYLATION IN THE AMYGDALA THAT IS ASSOCIATED WITH A DECREASE IN THE EXPRESSION OF SEVERAL SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY-ASSOCIATED GENES AND MAINTAINING HEIGHTENED ANXIETY-LIKE BEHAVIOR AND EXCESSIVE ALCOHOL INTAKE. ADOLESCENT ALCOHOL EXPOSURE ALSO LEADS TO HIGHER EXPRESSION OF HDAC2 AND A DEFICIT IN HISTONE ACETYLATION LEADING TO DECREASED EXPRESSION OF SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY-ASSOCIATED GENES AND HIGH ANXIETY AND DRINKING BEHAVIOR IN ADULTHOOD. ALL THESE STUDIES INDICATE THAT THE EPIGENOME CAN UNDERGO ALLOSTATIC REPROGRAMMING IN THE AMYGDALOID CIRCUITRY DURING VARIOUS STAGES OF ALCOHOL EXPOSURE. FURTHERMORE, OPENING THE CHROMATIN BY INHIBITING HDACS USING PHARMACOLOGICAL OR GENETIC MANIPULATIONS CAN LEAD TO THE ATTENUATION OF ANXIETY AS WELL AS ALCOHOL INTAKE. CHROMATIN REMODELING PROVIDES A CLEAR BIOLOGICAL BASIS FOR THE NEGATIVE AFFECTIVE STATES SEEN DURING ALCOHOL ADDICTION AND PRESENTS OPPORTUNITIES FOR NOVEL DRUG DEVELOPMENT AND TREATMENT OPTIONS. THIS ARTICLE IS PART OF THE SPECIAL ISSUE ENTITLED "ALCOHOLISM". 2017 20 5168 43 PRECONCEPTIONAL PATERNAL EXPOSURE TO A SINGLE TRAUMATIC EVENT AFFECTS POSTNATAL GROWTH OF FEMALE BUT NOT MALE OFFSPRING. ALTHOUGH PRECONCEPTIONAL AND PERICONCEPTIONAL MATERNAL STRESS IS A RECOGNIZED RISK FACTOR FOR OFFSPRING NEURODEVELOPMENTAL DISTURBANCES, LESS IS KNOWN ABOUT THE RELEVANCE OF PATERNAL EXPOSURES. THESE HAVE HITHERTO BEEN INVESTIGATED MAINLY WITH RESPECT TO SUBSTANCE-INDUCED IMPAIRMENT IN THE PROGENY. IN RECENT YEARS, EXPERIENTIAL INFLUENCES ON OFFSPRING HAVE COME INTO FOCUS THROUGH GROWING INSIGHT INTO EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS SUCH AS NONGENETIC MODES OF TRANSMISSION. THE EFFECT OF CHRONIC AND/OR EARLY MANIPULATIONS IN MALES HAS BEEN STUDIED BUT MUCH LESS IS KNOWN ABOUT THE POTENTIAL IMPACT OF SINGULAR MANIPULATIONS IN OLDER INDIVIDUALS. WE INVESTIGATED THE INFLUENCE OF A STRONG STRESSOR EXPOSURE, REMINISCENT OF A TRAUMATIC EVENT, IN ADULT MALE MICE ON OFFSPRING BEHAVIOR. MALE MICE, 6 WEEKS OF AGE, RECEIVED A STRONG FOOTSHOCK AND WERE MATED TO NAIVE FEMALES SEVERAL WEEKS LATER. MALE AND FEMALE OFFSPRING WERE INVESTIGATED IN A VARIETY OF TESTS FOR ANXIETY-LIKE AND DEPRESSION-LIKE BEHAVIORS. IN ADDITION, BODYWEIGHT DEVELOPMENT WAS ASSESSED. ALTHOUGH WE DID NOT OBSERVE ANY ALTERATIONS IN ANXIETY-LIKE AND DEPRESSIVE-LIKE BEHAVIORAL INDICES, WE RECORDED REDUCED BODYWEIGHT DEVELOPMENT IN THE FEMALE OFFSPRING. OUR DATA EMPHASIZE THE RELEVANCE OF SEX AS A (CO)DETERMINANT OF OUTCOMES IN THE WAKE OF PARENTAL MANIPULATIONS. THEY FURTHER SUGGEST THAT THE WINDOW OF VULNERABILITY FOR THE INDUCTION OF PATRILINEAR EFFECTS MIGHT BE WIDER THAN THAT CURRENTLY ASSUMED. 2013