1 5177 149 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 2 5791 62 STABLE HISTONE METHYLATION CHANGES AT PROTEOGLYCAN NETWORK GENES FOLLOWING ETHANOL EXPOSURE. ALCOHOL USE DISORDER (AUD) IS A CHRONIC MENTAL ILLNESS IN WHICH PATIENTS OFTEN ACHIEVE PROTRACTED PERIODS OF ABSTINENCE PRIOR TO RELAPSE. EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS MAY PROVIDE AN EXPLANATION FOR THE PERSISTING GENE EXPRESSION CHANGES THAT CAN BE OBSERVED EVEN AFTER LONG PERIODS OF ABSTINENCE AND MAY CONTRIBUTE TO RELAPSE. IN THIS STUDY, WE EXAMINED TWO HISTONE MODIFICATIONS, HISTONE 3 LYSINE 4 TRI-METHYLATION (H3K4ME3) AND HISTONE 3 LYSINE 27 TRI-METHYLATION (H3K27ME3), IN THE PREFRONTAL CORTEX OF WITHDRAWAL SEIZURE RESISTANT (WSR) MICE 21 DAYS AFTER 72 H OF ETHANOL VAPOR EXPOSURE. THESE HISTONE MODIFICATIONS WERE SELECTED BECAUSE THEY ARE ASSOCIATED WITH ACTIVE PROMOTERS (H3K4ME3) AND REPRESSED GENE EXPRESSION IN A EUCHROMATIC ENVIRONMENT (H3K27ME3). WE PERFORMED A GENOME-WIDE ANALYSIS TO IDENTIFY DIFFERENCES IN H3K4ME3 AND H3K27ME3 LEVELS IN POST-ETHANOL EXPOSURE VS. CONTROL MICE BY CHIP-SEQ. WE DETECTED A GLOBAL REDUCTION IN H3K4ME3 PEAKS AND INCREASE IN H3K27ME3 PEAKS IN POST-ETHANOL EXPOSURE MICE COMPARED TO CONTROLS, THESE CHANGES ARE CONSISTENT WITH PERSISTENT REDUCTIONS IN GENE EXPRESSION. PATHWAY ANALYSIS OF GENES DISPLAYING CHANGES IN H3K4ME3 AND H3K27ME3 REVEALED ENRICHMENT FOR GENES INVOLVED IN PROTEOGLYCAN AND CALCIUM SIGNALING PATHWAYS, RESPECTIVELY. MICROARRAY ANALYSIS OF 7,683 GENES AND QPCR ANALYSIS IDENTIFIED EIGHT GENES DISPLAYING CONCORDANT REGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION AND H3K4ME3/H3K27ME3. WE ALSO COMPARED CHANGES IN H3K4ME3 AND/OR H3K27ME3 FROM OUR STUDY WITH CHANGES IN GENE EXPRESSION IN RESPONSE TO ETHANOL FROM PUBLISHED LITERATURE AND WE FOUND THAT THE EXPRESSION OF 52% OF THE GENES WITH ALTERED H3K4ME3 BINDING AND 40% OF GENES WITH H3K27ME3 DIFFERENCES ARE ALTERED BY ETHANOL EXPOSURE. THE CHROMATIN CHANGES ASSOCIATED WITH THE 21-DAY POST-EXPOSURE PERIOD SUGGEST THAT THIS PERIOD IS A UNIQUE STATE IN THE ADDICTION CYCLE THAT DIFFERS FROM ETHANOL INTOXICATION AND ACUTE WITHDRAWAL. THESE RESULTS PROVIDE INSIGHTS INTO THE ENDURING EFFECTS OF ETHANOL ON PROTEOGLYCAN AND CALCIUM SIGNALING GENES IN THE BRAIN. 2018 3 1731 54 DYSREGULATION OF THE HISTONE DEMETHYLASE KDM6B IN ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE IS ASSOCIATED WITH EPIGENETIC REGULATION OF INFLAMMATORY SIGNALING PATHWAYS. EPIGENETIC ENZYMES OVERSEE LONG-TERM CHANGES IN GENE EXPRESSION BY INTEGRATING GENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL CUES. WHILE THERE ARE HUNDREDS OF ENZYMES THAT CONTROL HISTONE AND DNA MODIFICATIONS, THEIR POTENTIAL ROLES IN SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE REMAIN UNDEREXPLORED. A FEW RECENT STUDIES HAVE SUGGESTED THAT EPIGENETIC PROCESSES COULD UNDERLIE TRANSCRIPTOMIC AND BEHAVIORAL HALLMARKS OF ALCOHOL ADDICTION. IN THE PRESENT STUDY, WE SOUGHT TO IDENTIFY EPIGENETIC ENZYMES IN THE BRAIN THAT ARE DYSREGULATED DURING PROTRACTED ABSTINENCE AS A CONSEQUENCE OF CHRONIC AND INTERMITTENT ALCOHOL EXPOSURE. THROUGH QUANTITATIVE MRNA EXPRESSION ANALYSIS OF OVER 100 EPIGENETIC ENZYMES, WE IDENTIFIED 11 THAT ARE SIGNIFICANTLY ALTERED IN ALCOHOL-DEPENDENT RATS COMPARED WITH CONTROLS. FOLLOW-UP STUDIES OF ONE OF THESE ENZYMES, THE HISTONE DEMETHYLASE KDM6B, SHOWED THAT THIS ENZYME EXHIBITS REGION-SPECIFIC DYSREGULATION IN THE PREFRONTAL CORTEX AND NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS OF ALCOHOL-DEPENDENT RATS. KDM6B WAS ALSO UPREGULATED IN THE HUMAN ALCOHOLIC BRAIN. UPREGULATION OF KDM6B PROTEIN IN ALCOHOL-DEPENDENT RATS WAS ACCOMPANIED BY A DECREASE OF TRIMETHYLATION LEVELS AT HISTONE H3, LYSINE 27 (H3K27ME3), CONSISTENT WITH THE KNOWN DEMETHYLASE SPECIFICITY OF KDM6B. SUBSEQUENT EPIGENETIC (CHROMATIN IMMUNOPRECIPITATION [CHIP]-SEQUENCING) ANALYSIS SHOWED THAT ALCOHOL-INDUCED CHANGES IN H3K27ME3 WERE SIGNIFICANTLY ENRICHED AT GENES IN THE IL-6 SIGNALING PATHWAY, CONSISTENT WITH THE WELL-CHARACTERIZED ROLE OF KDM6B IN MODULATION OF INFLAMMATORY RESPONSES. KNOCKDOWN OF KDM6B IN CULTURED MICROGLIAL CELLS DIMINISHED IL-6 INDUCTION IN RESPONSE TO AN INFLAMMATORY STIMULUS. OUR FINDINGS IMPLICATE A NOVEL KDM6B-MEDIATED EPIGENETIC SIGNALING PATHWAY INTEGRATED WITH INFLAMMATORY SIGNALING PATHWAYS THAT ARE KNOWN TO UNDERLIE THE DEVELOPMENT OF ALCOHOL ADDICTION. 2021 4 6801 65 [EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS AND ALCOHOL USE DISORDERS: A POTENTIAL THERAPEUTIC TARGET]. ALCOHOL USE DISORDER IS A DEVASTATING ILLNESS WITH A PROFOUND HEALTH IMPACT, AND ITS DEVELOPMENT IS DEPENDENT ON BOTH GENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS. THIS DISEASE OCCURS OVER TIME AND REQUIRES CHANGES IN BRAIN GENE EXPRESSION. THERE IS CONVERGING EVIDENCE SUGGESTING THAT THE EPIGENETIC PROCESSES MAY PLAY A ROLE IN THE ALCOHOL-INDUCED GENE REGULATIONS AND BEHAVIOR SUCH AS THE INTERVENTION OF DNA METHYLATION AND HISTONE ACETYLATION. HISTONE ACETYLATION, LIKE HISTONE METHYLATION, IS A HIGHLY DYNAMIC PROCESS REGULATED BY TWO CLASSES OF ENZYMES: HISTONE ACETYLTRANSFERASES AND HISTONE DEACETYLASES (HDACS). TO DATE, 18 HUMAN HDAC ISOFORMS HAVE BEEN CHARACTERIZED, AND BASED ON THEIR SEQUENCE HOMOLOGIES AND COFACTOR DEPENDENCIES, THEY HAVE BEEN PHYLOGENETICALLY CATEGORIZED INTO 4 MAIN CLASSES: CLASSES I, II (A AND B), III, AND IV. IN THE BRAIN, EXPRESSION OF THE DIFFERENT CLASSES OF HDACS VARIES BETWEEN CELL TYPES AND ALSO IN THEIR SUBCELLULAR LOCALIZATION (NUCLEUS AND/OR CYTOSOL). FURTHERMORE, WE RECENTLY SHOWED THAT A SINGLE ETHANOL EXPOSURE INHIBITS HDAC ACTIVITY AND INCREASES BOTH H3 AND H4 HISTONE ACETYLATION WITHIN THE AMYGDALA OF RATS. IN THE BRAIN OF ALCOHOLIC PATIENTS, ETHANOL HAS BEEN SHOWN TO INDUCE HISTONE-RELATED AND DNA METHYLATION EPIGENETIC CHANGES IN SEVERAL REWARD REGIONS INVOLVED IN REWARD PROCESSES SUCH AS HIPPOCAMPUS, PREFRONTAL CORTEX, AND AMYGDALA. WE RECENTLY DEMONSTRATED ALTERATION OF HISTONE H3 ACETYLATION LEVELS IN SEVERAL BRAIN REGIONS FROM THE REWARD CIRCUIT OF RATS MADE DEPENDENT TO ALCOHOL AFTER CHRONIC AND INTERMITTENT EXPOSURE TO ETHANOL VAPOR. IN NEURONAL CELL LINE CULTURE, ETHANOL WAS SHOWN TO INDUCE HDAC EXPRESSION. IN MOUSE AND RAT BRAIN, NUMEROUS STUDIES REPORTED EPIGENETIC ALTERATIONS FOLLOWING ETHANOL EXPOSURE. WE ALSO DEMONSTRATED THAT BOTH THE EXPRESSION OF GENES AND THE ACTIVITY OF ENZYMES INVOLVED IN EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS ARE CHANGED AFTER REPEATED ADMINISTRATIONS OF ETHANOL IN MICE SENSITIZED TO THE MOTOR STIMULANT EFFECT OF ETHANOL (A MODEL OF DRUG-INDUCED NEUROPLASTICITY). NUMEROUS STUDIES HAVE SHOWN THAT HDAC INHIBITORS ARE ABLE TO COUNTER ETHANOL-INDUCED BEHAVIORS AND THE ETHANOL-INDUCED CHANGES IN THE LEVELS OF HDAC AND/OR LEVELS OF ACETYLATED HDAC. FOR EXAMPLE, TRICHOSTATIN A (TSA) TREATMENT CAUSED THE REVERSAL OF ETHANOL-INDUCED TOLERANCE, ANXIETY, AND ETHANOL DRINKING BY INHIBITING HDAC ACTIVITY, THEREBY INCREASING HISTONE ACETYLATION IN THE AMYGDALA OF RATS. ANOTHER STUDY DEMONSTRATED THAT TSA PREVENTED THE DEVELOPMENT OF ETHANOL WITHDRAWAL INDUCED ANXIETY IN RATS BY RESCUING DEFICITS IN HISTONE ACETYLATION INDUCED BY INCREASED HDAC ACTIVITY IN THE AMYGDALA. WE HAVE DEMONSTRATED THAT TREATMENT WITH THE HDAC INHIBITOR SODIUM BUTYRATE BLOCKS BOTH THE DEVELOPMENT AND THE EXPRESSION OF ETHANOL-INDUCED BEHAVIORAL SENSITIZATION IN MICE. IN THIS CONTEXT, CONVERGING EVIDENCE INDICATES THAT HDAC INHIBITORS COULD BE USEFUL IN COUNTERACTING ETHANOL-INDUCED GENE REGULATIONS VIA EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS, THAT IS, HDAC INHIBITORS COULD AFFECT DIFFERENT ACETYLATION SITES AND MAY ALSO ALTER THE EXPRESSION OF DIFFERENT GENES THAT COULD IN TURN COUNTERACT THE EFFECT OF ETHANOL. RECENT WORK IN RODENTS HAS SHOWN THAT SYSTEMIC ADMINISTRATION OF PAN HDAC CLASS I AND II INHIBITORS, TSA AND N-HYDROXY-N-PHENYL-OCTANEDIAMIDE [SUBEROYLANILIDE HYDROXAMIC ACID] (SAHA), AND OF THE MORE SELECTIVE INHIBITOR (MAINLY HDAC1 AND HDAC9) MS-275, DECREASE BINGE-LIKE ALCOHOL DRINKING IN MICE. SAHA SELECTIVELY REDUCED ETHANOL OPERANT SELF-ADMINISTRATION AND SEEKING IN RATS. OUR PREVIOUS STUDY REVEALED THAT MS-275 STRONGLY DECREASED OPERANT ETHANOL SELF-ADMINISTRATION IN ALCOHOL-DEPENDENT RATS WHEN ADMINISTERED 30 MINUTES BEFORE THE SESSION AT THE SECOND DAY OF INJECTION. WE ALSO DEMONSTRATED THAT INTRA-CEREBRO-VENTRICULAR INFUSION OF MS-275 INCREASES ACETYLATION OF HISTONE 4 WITHIN THE NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS AND THE DORSOLATERAL STRIATUM, ASSOCIATED TO A DECREASE IN ETHANOL SELF-ADMINISTRATION BY ABOUT 75%. MS-275 ALSO DIMINISHED BOTH THE MOTIVATION TO CONSUME ETHANOL (25% DECREASE), RELAPSE (BY ABOUT 50%) AND POSTPONED REACQUISITION AFTER ABSTINENCE. BOTH LITERATURE AND SEVERAL OF OUR STUDIES STRONGLY SUPPORT THE POTENTIAL THERAPEUTIC INTEREST OF TARGETING EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS IN EXCESSIVE ALCOHOL DRINKING AND STRENGTHEN THEINTEREST OF FOCUSING ON SPECIFIC ISOFORMS OF HISTONE DEACETYLASES. 2017 5 2156 54 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 6 4093 41 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 7 883 48 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 8 894 39 CHRONIC ETHANOL FEEDING ALTERS HEPATOCYTE MEMORY WHICH IS NOT ALTERED BY ACUTE FEEDING. BACKGROUND: GENE EXPRESSION CHANGES IN THE LIVER AFTER ACUTE BINGE DRINKING MAY DIFFER FROM THE CHANGES SEEN IN CHRONIC ETHANOL FEEDING IN THE RAT. THE CHANGES IN GENE EXPRESSION AFTER CHRONIC ETHANOL FEEDING MAY SENSITIZE THE LIVER TO ALCOHOL-INDUCED LIVER DAMAGE, WHICH IS NOT SEEN AFTER ACUTE BINGE DRINKING. METHODS: TO TEST THIS HYPOTHESIS, GENE MICROARRAY ANALYSIS WAS PERFORMED ON THE LIVERS OF RATS (N = 3) FED AN ACUTE BINGE DOSE OF ETHANOL (6 G/KG BODY WT) AND KILLED AT 3 AND 12 HOURS AFTER ETHANOL BY GAVAGE. THE GENE MICROARRAYS WERE COMPARED WITH THOSE MADE ON THE LIVER OF RATS FROM A PREVIOUS STUDY, IN WHICH THE RATS WERE FED ETHANOL BY INTRAGASTRIC TUBE FOR 1 MONTH (36% OF CALORIES DERIVED FROM ETHANOL). RESULTS: MICROARRAY ANALYSIS DATA VARIED BETWEEN THE ACUTE AND CHRONIC MODELS IN SEVERAL IMPORTANT RESPECTS. GROWTH FACTORS INCREASED MAINLY IN THE CHRONIC ALCOHOL FED RAT. CHANGES IN ENZYMES INVOLVED IN OXIDATIVE STRESS WERE NOTED ONLY WITH CHRONIC ETHANOL FEEDING. GENE EXPRESSION OF FAT METABOLISM WAS INCREASED ONLY WITH CHRONIC ETHANOL FEEDING. MOST IMPORTANTLY, EPIGENETIC RELATED ENZYMES AND ACETYLATION AND METHYLATION OF HISTONES CHANGED ONLY AFTER CHRONIC ETHANOL FEEDING. CONCLUSIONS: THE RESULTS SUPPORT THE CONCEPT THAT CHRONIC ETHANOL INGESTION INDUCES ALTERED GENE EXPRESSION AS A RESULT OF CHANGES IN EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS, WHERE ACETYLATION AND METHYLATION OF HISTONES WERE ALTERED. 2009 9 4931 49 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 10 1789 34 EFFECT OF CHRONIC HEROIN AND COCAINE ADMINISTRATION ON GLOBAL DNA METHYLATION IN BRAIN AND LIVER. DRUG ABUSE IS ASSOCIATED WITH EPIGENETIC CHANGES, SUCH AS HISTONE MODIFICATIONS AND DNA METHYLATION. THE PURPOSE OF THE PRESENT STUDY WAS TO EXAMINE THE EFFECT OF CHRONIC COCAINE AND HEROIN ADMINISTRATION ON GLOBAL DNA METHYLATION IN BRAIN AND LIVER. MALE, 8 WEEK OLD, C57BL/6J MICE RECEIVED HEROIN IN A CHRONIC 'INTERMITTENT' ESCALATING DOSE PARADIGM, OR COCAINE IN A CHRONIC ESCALATING DOSE 'BINGE' PARADIGM, WHICH MIMIC THE HUMAN PATTERN OF OPIOID OR COCAINE ABUSE RESPECTIVELY. FOLLOWING SACRIFICE, LIVERS AND BRAINS WERE REMOVED AND DNA WAS EXTRACTED FROM THEM. THE EXTRACTED DNA WAS HYDROLYZED AND 2'-DEOXYCYTIDINE AND 5-METHYL-2'-DEOXYCYTIDINE WERE DETERMINED BY HPLC-UV. THE % 5-METHYL-2'-DEOXYCYTIDINE CONTENT OF DNA WAS SIGNIFICANTLY HIGHER IN THE BRAIN COMPARED TO THE LIVER. THERE WERE NO DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE CONTROL ANIMALS AND THE COCAINE OR HEROIN TREATED ANIMALS IN NEITHER OF THE TISSUES EXAMINED, WHICH IS SURPRISING SINCE COCAINE ADMINISTRATION INDUCED GROSS MORPHOLOGICAL CHANGES IN THE LIVER. MOREOVER, THERE WAS NO DIFFERENCE IN THE % 5-METHYL-2'-DEOXYCYTIDINE CONTENT OF DNA BETWEEN THE COCAINE AND THE HEROIN TREATED ANIMALS. THE GLOBAL DNA METHYLATION STATUS IN THE BRAIN AND LIVER OF MICE CHRONICALLY TREATED WITH COCAINE OR HEROIN REMAINS UNAFFECTED, BUT THIS FINDING CANNOT EXCLUDE THE EXISTENCE OF ANATOMICAL REGION OR GENE-SPECIFIC METHYLATION DIFFERENCES. THIS IS THE FIRST TIME THAT GLOBAL DNA METHYLATION IN THE LIVER AND WHOLE BRAIN HAS BEEN STUDIED FOLLOWING CHRONIC COCAINE OR HEROIN TREATMENT. 2013 11 4150 42 MECHANISTIC INSIGHTS INTO EPIGENETIC MODULATION OF ETHANOL CONSUMPTION. THERE IS GROWING EVIDENCE THAT SMALL-MOLECULE INHIBITORS OF EPIGENETIC MODULATORS, SUCH AS HISTONE DEACETYLASES (HDAC) AND DNA METHYLTRANSFERASES (DNMT), CAN REDUCE VOLUNTARY ETHANOL CONSUMPTION IN ANIMAL MODELS, BUT MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR PROCESSES UNDERLYING THIS BEHAVIORAL EFFECT ARE POORLY UNDERSTOOD. WE USED C57BL/6J MALE MICE TO INVESTIGATE THE EFFECTS OF TWO FDA-APPROVED DRUGS, DECITABINE (A DNMT INHIBITOR) AND SAHA (AN HDAC INHIBITOR), ON ETHANOL CONSUMPTION USING TWO TESTS: BINGE-LIKE DRINKING IN THE DARK (DID) AND CHRONIC INTERMITTENT EVERY OTHER DAY (EOD) DRINKING. DECITABINE BUT NOT SAHA REDUCED ETHANOL CONSUMPTION IN BOTH TESTS. WE FURTHER INVESTIGATED DECITABINE'S EFFECTS ON THE BRAIN'S REWARD PATHWAY BY GENE EXPRESSION PROFILING IN THE VENTRAL TEGMENTAL AREA (VTA), USING RNA SEQUENCING AND ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL RECORDINGS FROM VTA DOPAMINERGIC NEURONS. DECITABINE-INDUCED DECREASES IN EOD DRINKING WERE ASSOCIATED WITH GLOBAL CHANGES IN GENE EXPRESSION, IMPLICATING REGULATION OF CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW, EXTRACELLULAR MATRIX ORGANIZATION, AND NEUROIMMUNE FUNCTIONS IN DECITABINE ACTIONS. IN ADDITION, AN IN VIVO ADMINISTRATION OF DECITABINE SHORTENED ETHANOL-INDUCED EXCITATION OF VTA DOPAMINERGIC NEURONS IN VITRO, SUGGESTING THAT DECITABINE REDUCES ETHANOL DRINKING VIA CHANGES IN THE REWARD PATHWAY. TAKEN TOGETHER, OUR DATA SUGGEST A CONTRIBUTION OF BOTH NEURONAL AND NON-NEURONAL MECHANISMS IN THE VTA IN THE REGULATION OF ETHANOL CONSUMPTION. DECITABINE AND OTHER EPIGENETIC COMPOUNDS HAVE BEEN APPROVED FOR CANCER TREATMENT, AND UNDERSTANDING THEIR MECHANISMS OF ACTIONS IN THE BRAIN MAY ASSIST IN REPURPOSING THESE DRUGS AND DEVELOPING NOVEL THERAPIES FOR CENTRAL DISORDERS, INCLUDING DRUG ADDICTION. 2017 12 990 40 CHRONIC SOCIAL STRESS INDUCES DNA METHYLATION CHANGES AT AN EVOLUTIONARY CONSERVED INTERGENIC REGION IN CHROMOSOME X. CHRONIC STRESS RESULTING FROM PROLONGED EXPOSURE TO NEGATIVE LIFE EVENTS INCREASES THE RISK OF MOOD AND ANXIETY DISORDERS. ALTHOUGH CHRONIC STRESS CAN CHANGE GENE EXPRESSION RELEVANT FOR BEHAVIOR, MOLECULAR REGULATORS OF THIS CHANGE HAVE NOT BEEN FULLY DETERMINED. ONE PROCESS THAT COULD PLAY A ROLE IS DNA METHYLATION, AN EPIGENETIC PROCESS WHEREBY A METHYL GROUP IS ADDED ONTO NUCLEOTIDES, PREDOMINANTLY CYTOSINE IN THE CPG CONTEXT, AND WHICH CAN BE INDUCED BY CHRONIC STRESS. IT IS UNKNOWN TO WHAT EXTENT CHRONIC SOCIAL DEFEAT, A MODEL OF HUMAN SOCIAL STRESS, INFLUENCES DNA METHYLATION PATTERNS ACROSS THE GENOME. OUR STUDY ADDRESSED THIS QUESTION BY USING A TARGETED-CAPTURE APPROACH CALLED METHYL-SEQ TO INVESTIGATE DNA METHYLATION PATTERNS OF THE DENTATE GYRUS AT PUTATIVE REGULATORY REGIONS ACROSS THE MOUSE GENOME FROM MICE EXPOSED TO 14 DAYS OF SOCIAL DEFEAT. FINDINGS WERE REPLICATED IN INDEPENDENT COHORTS BY BISULFITE-PYROSEQUENCING. TWO DIFFERENTIALLY METHYLATED REGIONS (DMRS) WERE IDENTIFIED. ONE DMR WAS LOCATED AT INTRON 9 OF DROSHA, AND IT SHOWED REDUCED METHYLATION IN STRESSED MICE. THIS OBSERVATION REPLICATED IN ONE OF TWO INDEPENDENT COHORTS. A SECOND DMR WAS IDENTIFIED AT AN INTERGENIC REGION OF CHROMOSOME X, AND METHYLATION IN THIS REGION WAS INCREASED IN STRESSED MICE. THIS METHYLATION DIFFERENCE REPLICATED IN TWO INDEPENDENT COHORTS AND IN MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER (MDD) POSTMORTEM BRAINS. THESE RESULTS HIGHLIGHT A REGION NOT PREVIOUSLY KNOWN TO BE DIFFERENTIALLY METHYLATED BY CHRONIC SOCIAL DEFEAT STRESS AND WHICH MAY BE INVOLVED IN MDD. 2018 13 2280 48 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 14 2489 32 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 15 213 38 ACUTE AND CHRONIC ELECTROCONVULSIVE SEIZURES (ECS) DIFFERENTIALLY REGULATE THE EXPRESSION OF EPIGENETIC MACHINERY IN THE ADULT RAT HIPPOCAMPUS. BACKGROUND: ELECTROCONVULSIVE SEIZURE TREATMENT IS A FAST-ACTING ANTIDEPRESSANT THERAPY THAT EVOKES RAPID TRANSCRIPTIONAL, NEUROGENIC, AND BEHAVIORAL CHANGES. EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS CONTRIBUTE TO ALTERED GENE REGULATION, WHICH UNDERLIES THE NEUROGENIC AND BEHAVIORAL EFFECTS OF ELECTROCONVULSIVE SEIZURE. WE HYPOTHESIZED THAT ELECTROCONVULSIVE SEIZURE MAY MODULATE THE EXPRESSION OF EPIGENETIC MACHINERY, THUS ESTABLISHING POTENTIAL ALTERATIONS IN THE EPIGENETIC LANDSCAPE. METHODS: WE EXAMINED THE INFLUENCE OF ACUTE AND CHRONIC ELECTROCONVULSIVE SEIZURE ON THE GENE EXPRESSION OF HISTONE MODIFIERS, NAMELY HISTONE ACETYLTRANSFERASES, HISTONE DEACETYLASES, HISTONE METHYLTRANSFERASES, AND HISTONE (LYSINE) DEMETHYLASES AS WELL AS DNA MODIFYING ENZYMES, INCLUDING DNA METHYLTRANSFERASES, DNA DEMETHYLASES, AND METHYL-CPG-BINDING PROTEINS IN THE HIPPOCAMPI OF ADULT MALE WISTAR RATS USING QUANTITATIVE REAL TIME-PCR ANALYSIS. FURTHER, WE EXAMINED THE INFLUENCE OF ACUTE AND CHRONIC ELECTROCONVULSIVE SEIZURE ON GLOBAL AND RESIDUE-SPECIFIC HISTONE ACETYLATION AND METHYLATION LEVELS WITHIN THE HIPPOCAMPUS, A BRAIN REGION IMPLICATED IN THE CELLULAR AND BEHAVIORAL EFFECTS OF ELECTROCONVULSIVE SEIZURE. RESULTS: ACUTE AND CHRONIC ELECTROCONVULSIVE SEIZURE INDUCED A PRIMARILY UNIQUE, AND IN CERTAIN CASES BIDIRECTIONAL, REGULATION OF HISTONE AND DNA MODIFIERS, AND METHYL-CPG-BINDING PROTEINS, WITH AN OVERLAPPING PATTERN OF GENE REGULATION RESTRICTED TO SIRT4, MLL3, JMJD3, GADD45B, TET2, AND TET3. GLOBAL HISTONE ACETYLATION AND METHYLATION LEVELS WERE PREDOMINANTLY UNCHANGED, WITH THE EXCEPTION OF A SIGNIFICANT DECLINE IN H3K9 ACETYLATION IN THE HIPPOCAMPUS FOLLOWING CHRONIC ELECTROCONVULSIVE SEIZURE. CONCLUSIONS: ELECTROCONVULSIVE SEIZURE TREATMENT EVOKES THE TRANSCRIPTIONAL REGULATION OF SEVERAL HISTONE AND DNA MODIFIERS, AND METHYL-CPG-BINDING PROTEINS WITHIN THE HIPPOCAMPUS, WITH A PREDOMINANTLY DISTINCT PATTERN OF REGULATION INDUCED BY ACUTE AND CHRONIC ELECTROCONVULSIVE SEIZURE. 2016 16 2013 46 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 17 1967 51 EPIGENETIC ALTERATION OF THE DOPAMINE TRANSPORTER GENE IN ALCOHOL-DEPENDENT PATIENTS IS ASSOCIATED WITH AGE. CHRONIC ALCOHOL ABUSE AND DEPENDENCE ARE ASSOCIATED WITH DYSFUNCTIONAL DOPAMINERGIC NEUROTRANSMISSION IN MESOCORTICOLIMBIC CIRCUITS. GENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS HAVE BEEN SHOWN TO MODULATE SUSCEPTIBILITY TO ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE, AND BOTH MAY ACT THROUGH EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS THAT CAN MODULATE GENE EXPRESSION, E.G. DNA METHYLATION AT CPG SITES. RECENT STUDIES HAVE SUGGESTED THAT DNA METHYLATION PATTERNS MAY CHANGE OVER TIME. HOWEVER, FEW DATA ARE AVAILABLE CONCERNING THE RATE OF THESE CHANGES IN SPECIFIC GENES. A RECENT STUDY FOUND THAT HYPERMETHYLATION OF THE PROMOTER OF THE DOPAMINE TRANSPORTER (DAT) GENE WAS POSITIVELY CORRELATED WITH ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE AND NEGATIVELY CORRELATED WITH ALCOHOL CRAVING. THE AIM OF THE PRESENT STUDY WAS TO REPLICATE THESE FINDINGS IN A LARGER SAMPLE OF ALCOHOL-DEPENDENT PATIENTS AND POPULATION-BASED CONTROLS MATCHED FOR AGE AND SEX. NO DIFFERENCE IN METHYLATION LEVEL WAS OBSERVED BETWEEN PATIENTS AND CONTROLS, AND NO DIFFERENCE IN METHYLATION LEVEL WAS OBSERVED BEFORE AND AFTER ALCOHOL WITHDRAWAL IN PATIENTS. HOWEVER, PATIENTS WITH MORE SEVERE CRAVING SHOWED A TREND TOWARDS LOWER DAT METHYLATION LEVELS (P = 0.07), WHICH IS CONSISTENT WITH PREVIOUS FINDINGS. FURTHERMORE, IN OUR OVERALL SAMPLE, DAT METHYLATION LEVELS INCREASED WITH AGE. INTERESTINGLY, A SEPARATE ANALYSIS OF PATIENTS SUGGESTED THAT THIS FINDING WAS MAINLY DRIVEN BY THE PATIENT GROUP. ALTHOUGH THE PRESENT DATA DO NOT CLARIFY WHETHER CHRONIC ALCOHOL ABUSE IS RESPONSIBLE FOR THIS PHENOMENON OR MERELY ENHANCES AN AGEING-SPECIFIC PROCESS, OUR FINDINGS SUGGEST THAT HYPERMETHYLATION IN ALCOHOL-DEPENDENT PATIENTS IS A CONSEQUENCE, RATHER THAN A CAUSE, OF THE DISORDER. 2014 18 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 19 1186 38 COORDINATED DYNAMIC GENE EXPRESSION CHANGES IN THE CENTRAL NUCLEUS OF THE AMYGDALA DURING ALCOHOL WITHDRAWAL. BACKGROUND: CHRONIC ALCOHOL USE CAUSES WIDESPREAD CHANGES IN THE CELLULAR BIOLOGY OF THE AMYGDALA'S CENTRAL NUCLEUS (CEA), A GABAERGIC CENTER THAT INTEGRATES AUTONOMIC PHYSIOLOGY WITH THE EMOTIONAL ASPECTS OF MOTIVATION AND LEARNING. WHILE ALCOHOL-INDUCED NEUROCHEMICAL CHANGES PLAY A ROLE IN DEPENDENCE AND DRINKING BEHAVIOR, LITTLE IS KNOWN ABOUT THE CEA'S DYNAMIC CHANGES DURING WITHDRAWAL, A PERIOD OF EMOTIONAL AND PHYSIOLOGIC DISTURBANCE. METHODS: WE USED A QRT-PCR PLATFORM TO MEASURE 139 TRANSCRIPTS IN 92 RAT CEA SAMPLES FROM CONTROL (N = 33), CHRONICALLY ALCOHOL EXPOSED (N = 26), AND WITHDRAWN RATS (T = 4, 8, 18, 32, AND 48 HOURS; N = 5, 10, 7, 6, 5). THIS FOCUSED TRANSCRIPT SET ALLOWED US TO IDENTIFY SIGNIFICANT DYNAMIC EXPRESSION PATTERNS DURING THE FIRST 48 HOURS OF WITHDRAWAL AND PROPOSE POTENTIAL REGULATORY MECHANISMS. RESULTS: CHRONIC ALCOHOL EXPOSURE CAUSES A LIMITED NUMBER OF SMALL MAGNITUDE EXPRESSION CHANGES. IN CONTRAST, WITHDRAWAL RESULTS IN A GREATER NUMBER OF LARGE CHANGES WITHIN 4 HOURS OF REMOVAL OF THE ALCOHOL DIET. SIXTY-FIVE OF THE 139 MEASURED TRANSCRIPTS (47%) SHOWED DIFFERENTIAL REGULATION DURING WITHDRAWAL. OVER THE 48-HOUR PERIOD, DYNAMIC CHANGES IN THE EXPRESSION OF GAMMA-AMINOBUTYRIC ACID TYPE A (GABA(A) ), IONOTROPIC GLUTAMATE AND NEUROPEPTIDE SYSTEM-RELATED G-PROTEIN-COUPLED RECEPTOR SUBUNITS, AND THE RAS/RAF SIGNALING PATHWAY WERE SEEN AS WELL AS DOWNSTREAM TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS (TFS) AND EPIGENETIC REGULATORS. FOUR TEMPORALLY CORRELATED GENE CLUSTERS WERE IDENTIFIED WITH SHARED FUNCTIONAL ROLES INCLUDING NMDA RECEPTORS, MAPKKK AND CHEMOKINE SIGNALING CASCADES, AND MEDIATORS OF LONG-TERM POTENTIATION, AMONG OTHERS. CLUSTER PROMOTER REGIONS SHARED OVERREPRESENTED BINDING SITES FOR MULTIPLE TFS INCLUDING CEBP, USF-1, SMAD3, AP-2, AND C-ETS, SUGGESTING A POTENTIAL REGULATORY ROLE. CONCLUSIONS: DURING ALCOHOL WITHDRAWAL, THE CEA EXPERIENCES RAPID CHANGES IN MRNA EXPRESSION OF THESE FUNCTIONALLY RELATED TRANSCRIPTS THAT WERE NOT PREDICTED BY MEASUREMENT DURING CHRONIC EXPOSURE. THIS STUDY PROVIDES NEW INSIGHT INTO DYNAMIC EXPRESSION CHANGES DURING ALCOHOL WITHDRAWAL AND SUGGESTS NOVEL REGULATORY RELATIONSHIPS THAT POTENTIALLY IMPACT THE ASPECTS OF EMOTIONAL MODULATION. 2013 20 2606 44 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