1 5219 139 PREVIOUS HISTORY OF CHRONIC STRESS CHANGES THE TRANSCRIPTIONAL RESPONSE TO GLUCOCORTICOID CHALLENGE IN THE DENTATE GYRUS REGION OF THE MALE RAT HIPPOCAMPUS. CHRONIC STRESS IS A RISK FACTOR FOR SEVERAL NEUROPSYCHIATRIC DISEASES, SUCH AS DEPRESSION AND PSYCHOSIS. IN RESPONSE TO STRESS GLUCOCORTICOIDS (GCS) ARE SECRETED THAT BIND TO MINERALOCORTICOID AND GLUCOCORTICOID RECEPTORS, LIGAND-ACTIVATED TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS THAT REGULATE THE TRANSCRIPTION OF GENE NETWORKS IN THE BRAIN NECESSARY FOR COPING WITH STRESS, RECOVERY, AND ADAPTATION. CHRONIC STRESS PARTICULARLY AFFECTS THE DENTATE GYRUS (DG) SUBREGION OF THE HIPPOCAMPUS, CAUSING SEVERAL FUNCTIONAL AND MORPHOLOGICAL CHANGES WITH CONSEQUENCES FOR LEARNING AND MEMORY, WHICH ARE LIKELY ADAPTIVE BUT AT THE SAME TIME MAKE DG NEURONS MORE VULNERABLE TO SUBSEQUENT CHALLENGES. THE AIM OF THIS STUDY WAS TO INVESTIGATE THE TRANSCRIPTIONAL RESPONSE OF DG NEURONS TO A GC CHALLENGE IN MALE RATS PREVIOUSLY EXPOSED TO CHRONIC RESTRAINT STRESS (CRS). AN INTRIGUING FINDING OF THE CURRENT STUDY WAS THAT HAVING A HISTORY OF CRS HAD PROFOUND CONSEQUENCES FOR THE SUBSEQUENT RESPONSE TO ACUTE GC CHALLENGE, DIFFERENTIALLY AFFECTING THE EXPRESSION OF SEVERAL HUNDREDS OF GENES IN THE DG COMPARED WITH CHALLENGED NONSTRESSED CONTROL ANIMALS. THIS ENDURING EFFECT OF PREVIOUS STRESS EXPOSURE SUGGESTS THAT EPIGENETIC PROCESSES MAY BE INVOLVED. IN LINE WITH THIS, CRS INDEED AFFECTED THE EXPRESSION OF SEVERAL GENES INVOLVED IN CHROMATIN STRUCTURE AND EPIGENETIC PROCESSES, INCLUDING ASF1, ASH1L, HIST1H3F, AND TP63. THE DATA PRESENTED HERE INDICATE THAT CRS ALTERS THE TRANSCRIPTIONAL RESPONSE TO A SUBSEQUENT GC INJECTION. WE PROPOSE THAT THIS ALTERED TRANSCRIPTIONAL POTENTIAL FORMS PART OF THE MOLECULAR MECHANISM UNDERLYING THE ENHANCED VULNERABILITY FOR STRESS-RELATED DISORDERS LIKE DEPRESSION CAUSED BY CHRONIC STRESS. 2013 2 1790 40 EFFECT OF CHRONIC MILD STRESS ON HIPPOCAMPAL TRANSCRIPTOME IN MICE SELECTED FOR HIGH AND LOW STRESS-INDUCED ANALGESIA AND DISPLAYING DIFFERENT EMOTIONAL BEHAVIORS. THERE IS INCREASING EVIDENCE THAT MOOD DISORDERS MAY DERIVE FROM THE IMPACT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PRESSURE ON GENETICALLY SUSCEPTIBLE INDIVIDUALS. STRESS-INDUCED HIPPOCAMPAL PLASTICITY HAS BEEN IMPLICATED IN DEPRESSION. WE STUDIED HIPPOCAMPAL TRANSCRIPTOMES IN STRAINS OF MICE THAT DISPLAY HIGH (HA) AND LOW (LA) SWIM STRESS-INDUCED ANALGESIA AND THAT DIFFER IN EMOTIONAL BEHAVIORS AND RESPONSES TO DIFFERENT CLASSES OF ANTIDEPRESSANTS. CHRONIC MILD STRESS (CMS) AFFECTED EXPRESSION OF A NUMBER OF GENES COMMON FOR BOTH STRAINS. CMS ALSO PRODUCED STRAIN SPECIFIC CHANGES IN EXPRESSION SUGGESTING THAT HIPPOCAMPAL RESPONSES TO STRESS DEPEND ON GENOTYPE. CONSIDERABLY LARGER NUMBER OF GENES, BIOLOGICAL PROCESSES, MOLECULAR FUNCTIONS, BIOCHEMICAL PATHWAYS, AND GENE NETWORKS WERE AFFECTED BY CMS IN LA THAN IN HA MICE. THE RESULTS SUGGEST THAT POTENTIAL DRUG TARGETS AGAINST DETRIMENTAL EFFECTS OF STRESS INCLUDE GLUTAMATE TRANSPORTERS, AND CHOLINERGIC, CHOLECYSTOKININ (CCK), GLUCOCORTICOIDS, AND THYROID HORMONES RECEPTORS. FURTHERMORE, SOME BIOLOGICAL PROCESSES EVOKED BY STRESS AND DIFFERENT BETWEEN THE STRAINS, SUCH AS APOPTOSIS, NEUROGENESIS AND CHROMATIN MODIFICATIONS, MAY BE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE LONG-TERM, IRREVERSIBLE EFFECTS OF STRESS AND SUGGEST A ROLE FOR EPIGENETIC REGULATION OF MOOD RELATED STRESS RESPONSES. 2011 3 6174 51 THE HIPPOCAMPUS, NEUROTROPHIC FACTORS AND DEPRESSION: POSSIBLE IMPLICATIONS FOR THE PHARMACOTHERAPY OF DEPRESSION. DEPRESSION IS A PREVALENT, HIGHLY DEBILITATING MENTAL DISORDER AFFECTING UP TO 15% OF THE POPULATION AT LEAST ONCE IN THEIR LIFETIME, WITH HUGE COSTS FOR SOCIETY. NEUROBIOLOGICAL MECHANISMS OF DEPRESSION ARE STILL NOT WELL KNOWN, ALTHOUGH THERE IS CONSENSUS ABOUT INTERPLAY BETWEEN GENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS. ANTIDEPRESSANT MEDICATIONS ARE FREQUENTLY USED IN DEPRESSION, BUT AT LEAST 50% OF PATIENTS ARE POOR RESPONDERS, EVEN TO MORE RECENTLY DISCOVERED MEDICATIONS. FURTHERMORE, CLINICAL RESPONSE ONLY OCCURS FOLLOWING WEEKS TO MONTHS OF TREATMENT AND ONLY CHRONIC TREATMENT IS EFFECTIVE, SUGGESTING THAT ACTIONS BEYOND THE RAPIDLY OCCURRING EFFECT OF ENHANCING MONOAMINERGIC SYSTEMS, SUCH AS ADAPTATION OF THESE SYSTEMS, ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE EFFECTS OF ANTIDEPRESSANTS. RECENT STUDIES INDICATE THAT AN IMPAIRMENT OF SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY (NEUROGENESIS, AXON BRANCHING, DENDRITOGENESIS AND SYNAPTOGENESIS) IN SPECIFIC AREAS OF THE CNS, PARTICULARLY THE HIPPOCAMPUS, MAY BE A CORE FACTOR IN THE PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF DEPRESSION. THE ABNORMAL NEURAL PLASTICITY MAY BE RELATED TO ALTERATIONS IN THE LEVELS OF NEUROTROPHIC FACTORS, NAMELY BRAIN-DERIVED NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR (BDNF), WHICH PLAY A CENTRAL ROLE IN PLASTICITY. AS BDNF IS REPRESSED BY STRESS, EPIGENETIC REGULATION OF THE BDNF GENE MAY PLAY AN IMPORTANT ROLE IN DEPRESSION. THE HIPPOCAMPUS IS SMALLER IN DEPRESSED PATIENTS, ALTHOUGH IT IS UNCLEAR WHETHER SMALLER SIZE IS A CONSEQUENCE OF DEPRESSION OR A PRE-EXISTING, VULNERABILITY MARKER FOR DEPRESSION. ENVIRONMENTAL STRESSORS TRIGGERING ACTIVATION OF THE HYPOTHALAMIC-PITUITARY-ADRENAL AXIS CAUSE THE BRAIN TO BE EXPOSED TO CORTICOSTEROIDS, AFFECTING NEUROBEHAVIOURAL FUNCTIONS WITH A STRONG DOWNREGULATION OF HIPPOCAMPAL NEUROGENESIS, AND ARE A MAJOR RISK FACTOR FOR DEPRESSION. ANTIDEPRESSANT TREATMENT INCREASES BDNF LEVELS, STIMULATES NEUROGENESIS AND REVERSES THE INHIBITORY EFFECTS OF STRESS, BUT THIS EFFECT IS EVIDENT ONLY AFTER 3-4 WEEKS OF ADMINISTRATION, THE TIME COURSE FOR MATURATION OF NEW NEURONS. THE ABLATION OF HIPPOCAMPAL NEUROGENESIS BLOCKS THE BEHAVIOURAL EFFECTS OF ANTIDEPRESSANTS IN ANIMAL MODELS. THE ABOVE FINDINGS SUGGEST NEW POSSIBLE TARGETS FOR THE PHARMACOTHERAPY OF DEPRESSION SUCH AS NEUROTROPHIC FACTORS, THEIR RECEPTORS AND RELATED INTRACELLULAR SIGNALLING CASCADES; AGENTS COUNTERACTING THE EFFECTS OF STRESS ON HIPPOCAMPAL NEUROGENESIS (INCLUDING ANTAGONISTS OF CORTICOSTEROIDS, INFLAMMATORY CYTOKINES AND THEIR RECEPTORS); AND AGENTS FACILITATING THE ACTIVATION OF GENE EXPRESSION AND INCREASING THE TRANSCRIPTION OF NEUROTROPHINS IN THE BRAIN. 2011 4 5820 44 STRESS DYNAMICALLY REGULATES BEHAVIOR AND GLUTAMATERGIC GENE EXPRESSION IN HIPPOCAMPUS BY OPENING A WINDOW OF EPIGENETIC PLASTICITY. EXCITATORY AMINO ACIDS PLAY A KEY ROLE IN BOTH ADAPTIVE AND DELETERIOUS EFFECTS OF STRESSORS ON THE BRAIN, AND DYSREGULATED GLUTAMATE HOMEOSTASIS HAS BEEN ASSOCIATED WITH PSYCHIATRIC AND NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS. HERE, WE ELUCIDATE MECHANISMS OF EPIGENETIC PLASTICITY IN THE HIPPOCAMPUS IN THE INTERACTIONS BETWEEN A HISTORY OF CHRONIC STRESS AND FAMILIAR AND NOVEL ACUTE STRESSORS THAT ALTER EXPRESSION OF ANXIETY- AND DEPRESSIVE-LIKE BEHAVIORS. WE DEMONSTRATE THAT ACUTE RESTRAINT AND ACUTE FORCED SWIM STRESSORS INDUCE DIFFERENTIAL EFFECTS ON THESE BEHAVIORS IN NAIVE MICE AND IN MICE WITH A HISTORY OF CHRONIC-RESTRAINT STRESS (CRS). THEY REVEAL A KEY ROLE FOR EPIGENETIC UP- AND DOWN-REGULATION OF THE PUTATIVE PRESYNAPTIC TYPE 2 METABOTROPIC GLUTAMATE (MGLU2) RECEPTORS AND THE POSTSYNAPTIC NR1/NMDA RECEPTORS IN THE HIPPOCAMPUS AND PARTICULARLY IN THE DENTATE GYRUS (DG), A REGION OF ACTIVE NEUROGENESIS AND A TARGET OF ANTIDEPRESSANT TREATMENT. WE SHOW CHANGES IN DG LONG-TERM POTENTIATION (LTP) THAT PARALLEL BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES, WITH HABITUATION TO THE SAME ACUTE RESTRAINT STRESSOR AND SENSITIZATION TO A NOVEL FORCED-SWIM STRESSOR. IN WT MICE AFTER CRS AND IN UNSTRESSED MICE WITH A BDNF LOSS-OF-FUNCTION ALLELE (BDNF VAL66MET), WE SHOW THAT THE EPIGENETIC ACTIVATOR OF HISTONE ACETYLATION, P300, PLAYS A PIVOTAL ROLE IN THE DYNAMIC UP- AND DOWN-REGULATION OF MGLU2 IN HIPPOCAMPUS VIA HISTONE-3-LYSINE-27-ACETYLATION (H3K27AC) WHEN ACUTE STRESSORS ARE APPLIED. THESE HIPPOCAMPAL RESPONSES REVEAL A WINDOW OF EPIGENETIC PLASTICITY THAT MAY BE USEFUL FOR TREATMENT OF DISORDERS IN WHICH GLUTAMATERGIC TRANSMISSION IS DYSREGULATED. 2015 5 5467 50 RESILIENT PHENOTYPE IN CHRONIC MILD STRESS PARADIGM IS ASSOCIATED WITH ALTERED EXPRESSION LEVELS OF MIR-18A-5P AND SEROTONIN 5-HT(1A) RECEPTOR IN DORSAL PART OF THE HIPPOCAMPUS. DISTURBED SEROTONERGIC SIGNALING IN THE HIPPOCAMPUS OBSERVED IN MANY INDIVIDUALS VULNERABLE TO STRESS HAS BEEN SUGGESTED AS ONE OF THE PRIMARY FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF DEPRESSION. HOWEVER, LITTLE IS KNOWN ABOUT THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE BRAIN IN THE RESILIENT PHENOTYPE. RESILIENT SUBJECTS MAINTAIN A POSITIVE MOOD AND PSYCHOLOGICAL BALANCE DESPITE BEING UNDER THE STRESS INFLUENCE. IN OUR STUDY, WE GENERATED STRESS-VULNERABLE AND RESILIENT RATS BY USING A CHRONIC MILD STRESS (CMS) PARADIGM. USING DIFFERENT MOLECULAR APPROACHES, WE REVEALED THAT RESILIENT ANIMALS EXHIBITED A SIGNIFICANTLY DECREASED EXPRESSION LEVEL OF MIR-18A-5P AND, IN THE SAME TIME, AN ELEVATED LEVEL OF 5-HT1AR IN DORSAL, BUT NOT VENTRAL, PART OF THE HIPPOCAMPUS. DESCRIBED BIOCHEMICAL CHANGES WERE NOT OBSERVED IN ANIMALS BEHAVIORALLY VULNERABLE TO STRESS. FURTHER, IN VITRO ANALYSIS SHOWED THAT MIR-18A-5P MAY BE A NEGATIVE EPIGENETIC REGULATOR OF 5-HT1AR SINCE THE TREATMENT OF ADULT HIPPOCAMPAL NEURONS WITH MIR-18A-5P MIMIC SIGNIFICANTLY LOWERED THE EXPRESSION LEVEL OF MRNA ENCODING 5-HT1AR. MOREOVER, BIOINFORMATIC ANALYSIS OF POTENTIAL TARGET GENES EXPRESSED IN THE HIPPOCAMPUS AND BEING REGULATED BY MIR-18A-5P SHOWED THAT THIS MICRORNA MAY REGULATE BIOLOGICAL PROCESSES, SUCH AS AXONOGENESIS, WHICH ARE IMPORTANT IN THE FUNCTIONING OF THE HIPPOCAMPUS IN BOTH RATS AND HUMANS. ALL THESE MOLECULAR FEATURES MAY CONTRIBUTE TO SEROTONERGIC HOMEOSTATIC BALANCE AT THE LEVEL OF SEROTONIN TURNOVER OBSERVED IN HIPPOCAMPI OF RESILIENT BUT NOT STRESS-VULNERABLE RATS. DELINEATION OF FURTHER MOLECULAR AND BIOCHEMICAL MARKERS UNDERLYING RESILIENCE TO STRESS MAY CONTRIBUTE TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF NEW ANTIDEPRESSANT STRATEGIES WHICH WILL RESTORE RESILIENT PHENOTYPE IN DEPRESSED PATIENTS. 2019 6 1981 38 EPIGENETIC ALTERATIONS IN DNA AND HISTONE MODIFICATIONS CAUSED BY DEPRESSION AND ANTIDEPRESSANT DRUGS: LESSONS FROM THE RODENT MODELS. EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS REGULATE CHROMATIN FOLDING AND FUNCTION. EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS REGULATE TRANSCRIPTION MEDIATING EFFECTS OF VARIOUS STIMULI ON GENE EXPRESSION. THESE MECHANISMS ARE INVOLVED IN TRANSCRIPTIONAL CONTROL IN VARIOUS PHYSIOLOGICAL AND PATHOLOGICAL CONDITIONS INCLUDING NEUROPSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS AND BEHAVIORAL ABNORMALITIES SUCH AS DEPRESSION. IN RODENTS, EXPOSURE TO CHRONIC SOCIAL STRESS WAS SHOWN TO INDUCE BEHAVIORAL IMPAIRMENTS AND MEMORY/LEARNING DEFICITS THAT RESEMBLE DEPRESSIVE-LIKE PHENOTYPE IN HUMANS. THE RODENT MODELS OF CHRONIC STRESS WERE WIDELY USED TO STUDY MOLECULAR MECHANISMS OF DEPRESSION. IN THESE MODELS, EARLY EXPOSURE TO CHRONIC STRESS SUCH AS PRENATAL OR POSTNATAL STRESS INDUCES LONG-TERM HYPERACTIVE STRESS RESPONSES, BEHAVIORAL ABNORMALITIES, AND FUNCTIONAL IMPAIRMENTS IN BRAIN FUNCTION THAT PERSIST IN ADULTHOOD. FURTHERMORE, THESE ALTERATIONS CAN BE TRANSMITTED TO OFFSPRING OF CHRONICALLY STRESSED ANIMALS ACROSS SEVERAL GENERATIONS. MOLECULAR STUDIES IN ANIMAL MODELS SHOWED THAT CHRONIC STRESS INDUCES STABLE EPIGENETIC CHANGES IN SPECIFIC BRAIN REGIONS, PRIMARILY IN THE LIMBIC SYSTEM. THESE CHANGES LEAD TO LONG-LASTING ABNORMALITIES IN BEHAVIOR THAT PERSIST IN ADULTHOOD AND CAN BE TRANSMITTED TO OFFSPRING. TREATMENT WITH EPIGENETICALLY ACTIVE ANTIDEPRESSANTS DISRUPTS THE ABNORMAL STRESS-INDUCED EPIGENETIC PROGRAMMING AND PROVIDES EPIGENETIC PATTERNS THAT RESEMBLE EPIGENETIC BACKGROUND OF STRESS RESILIENT INDIVIDUALS. 2017 7 584 48 BEHAVIORAL NEUROADAPTATION TO ALCOHOL: FROM GLUCOCORTICOIDS TO HISTONE ACETYLATION. A PRIME MECHANISM THAT CONTRIBUTES TO THE DEVELOPMENT AND MAINTENANCE OF ALCOHOLISM IS THE DYSREGULATION OF THE HYPOTHALAMIC-PITUITARY-ADRENAL AXIS ACTIVITY AND THE RELEASE OF GLUCOCORTICOIDS (CORTISOL IN HUMANS AND PRIMATES, CORTICOSTERONE IN RODENTS) FROM THE ADRENAL GLANDS. IN THE BRAIN, SUSTAINED, LOCAL ELEVATION OF GLUCOCORTICOID CONCENTRATION EVEN LONG AFTER CESSATION OF CHRONIC ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION COMPROMISES FUNCTIONAL INTEGRITY OF A CIRCUIT, INCLUDING THE PREFRONTAL CORTEX (PFC), THE HIPPOCAMPUS (HPC), AND THE AMYGDALA (AMG). THESE STRUCTURES ARE IMPLICATED IN LEARNING AND MEMORY PROCESSES AS WELL AS IN ORCHESTRATING NEUROADAPTIVE RESPONSES TO STRESS AND ANXIETY RESPONSES. THUS, POTENTIATION OF ANXIETY-RELATED NEUROADAPTATION BY ALCOHOL IS CHARACTERIZED BY AN ABNORMALLY AMG HYPERACTIVITY COUPLED WITH A HYPOFUNCTION OF THE PFC AND THE HPC. THIS REVIEW DESCRIBES RESEARCH ON MOLECULAR AND EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS BY WHICH ALCOHOL CAUSES DISTINCT REGION-SPECIFIC ADAPTIVE CHANGES IN GENE EXPRESSION PATTERNS AND ULTIMATELY LEADS TO A VARIETY OF COGNITIVE AND BEHAVIORAL IMPAIRMENTS ON PREFRONTAL- AND HIPPOCAMPAL-BASED TASKS. ALCOHOL-INDUCED NEUROADAPTATIONS INVOLVE THE DYSREGULATION OF NUMEROUS SIGNALING CASCADES, LEADING TO LONG-TERM CHANGES IN TRANSCRIPTIONAL PROFILES OF GENES, THROUGH THE ACTIONS OF TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS SUCH AS [CAMP RESPONSE ELEMENT-BINDING PROTEIN (CREB)] AND CHROMATIN REMODELING DUE TO POSTTRANSLATIONAL MODIFICATIONS OF HISTONE PROTEINS. WE DESCRIBE THE ROLE OF PREFRONTAL-HPC-AMG CIRCUIT IN MEDIATING THE EFFECTS OF ACUTE AND CHRONIC ALCOHOL ON LEARNING AND MEMORY, AND REGION-SPECIFIC MOLECULAR AND EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS INVOLVED IN THIS PROCESS. THIS REVIEW FIRST DISCUSSES THE IMPORTANCE OF BRAIN REGION-SPECIFIC DYSREGULATION OF GLUCOCORTICOID CONCENTRATION IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE AND DESCRIBES HOW PERSISTENTLY INCREASED GLUCOCORTICOID LEVELS IN PFC MAY BE INVOLVED IN MEDIATING WORKING MEMORY IMPAIRMENTS AND NEUROADAPTIVE CHANGES DURING WITHDRAWAL FROM CHRONIC ALCOHOL INTAKE. IT THEN HIGHLIGHTS THE ROLE OF CAMP-PKA-CREB SIGNALING CASCADE AND HISTONE ACETYLATION WITHIN THE PFC AND LIMBIC STRUCTURES IN ALCOHOL-INDUCED ANXIETY AND BEHAVIORAL IMPAIRMENTS, AND HOW AN UNDERSTANDING OF FUNCTIONAL ALTERATIONS OF THESE PATHWAYS MIGHT LEAD TO BETTER TREATMENTS FOR NEUROPSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS. 2016 8 2445 34 EPIGENETIC STATUS OF GDNF IN THE VENTRAL STRIATUM DETERMINES SUSCEPTIBILITY AND ADAPTATION TO DAILY STRESSFUL EVENTS. STRESSFUL EVENTS DURING ADULTHOOD ARE POTENT ADVERSE ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS THAT CAN PREDISPOSE INDIVIDUALS TO PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS, INCLUDING DEPRESSION; HOWEVER, MANY INDIVIDUALS EXPOSED TO STRESSFUL EVENTS CAN ADAPT AND FUNCTION NORMALLY. WHILE STRESS VULNERABILITY MAY INFLUENCE DEPRESSION, THE MOLECULAR MECHANISMS UNDERLYING THE SUSCEPTIBILITY AND ADAPTATION TO CHRONIC STRESS WITHIN THE BRAIN ARE POORLY UNDERSTOOD. IN THIS STUDY, TWO GENETICALLY DISTINCT MOUSE STRAINS THAT EXHIBIT DIFFERENT BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES TO CHRONIC STRESS WERE USED TO DEMONSTRATE HOW THE DIFFERENTIAL EPIGENETIC STATUS OF THE GLIAL CELL-DERIVED NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR (GDNF) GENE IN THE VENTRAL STRIATUM MODULATES SUSCEPTIBILITY AND ADAPTATION TO CHRONIC STRESS. OUR RESULTS SUGGEST THAT THE HISTONE MODIFICATIONS AND DNA METHYLATION OF THE GDNF PROMOTER HAVE CRUCIAL ROLES IN THE CONTROL OF BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES TO CHRONIC STRESS. OUR DATA PROVIDE INSIGHTS INTO THESE MECHANISMS, SUGGESTING THAT EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS OF GDNF, ALONG WITH GENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS, CONTRIBUTE TO BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES TO STRESS. 2011 9 4093 34 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 10 4642 44 NEURONAL PLASTICITY: A LINK BETWEEN STRESS AND MOOD DISORDERS. ALTHOUGH STRESS REPRESENTS THE MAJOR ENVIRONMENTAL ELEMENT OF SUSCEPTIBILITY FOR MOOD DISORDERS, THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN STRESS AND DISEASE REMAINS TO BE FULLY ESTABLISHED. IN THE PRESENT ARTICLE WE REVIEW THE EVIDENCE IN SUPPORT FOR A ROLE OF NEURONAL PLASTICITY, AND IN PARTICULAR OF NEUROTROPHIC FACTORS. EVEN THOUGH DECREASED LEVELS OF NOREPINEPHRINE AND SEROTONIN MAY UNDERLIE DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS, COMPELLING EVIDENCE NOW SUGGESTS THAT MOOD DISORDERS ARE CHARACTERIZED BY REDUCED NEURONAL PLASTICITY, WHICH CAN BE BROUGHT ABOUT BY EXPOSURE TO STRESS AT DIFFERENT STAGES OF LIFE. INDEED THE EXPRESSION OF NEUROTROPHIC MOLECULES, SUCH AS THE NEUROTROPHIN BDNF, IS REDUCED IN DEPRESSED SUBJECTS AS WELL AS IN EXPERIMENTAL ANIMALS EXPOSED TO ADVERSE EXPERIENCE AT EARLY STAGES OF LIFE OR AT ADULTHOOD. THESE CHANGES SHOW AN ANATOMICAL SPECIFICITY AND MIGHT BE SUSTAINED BY EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS. PHARMACOLOGICAL INTERVENTION MAY NORMALIZE SUCH DEFECTS AND IMPROVE NEURONAL FUNCTION THROUGH THE MODULATION OF THE SAME FACTORS THAT ARE DEFECTIVE IN DEPRESSION. SEVERAL STUDIES HAVE DEMONSTRATED THAT CHRONIC, BUT NOT ACUTE, ANTIDEPRESSANT TREATMENT INCREASES THE EXPRESSION OF BDNF AND MAY ENHANCE ITS LOCALIZATION AT SYNAPTIC LEVEL. ANTIDEPRESSANT TREATMENT CAN NORMALIZE DEFICITS IN NEUROTROPHIN EXPRESSION PRODUCED BY CHRONIC STRESS PARADIGMS, BUT MAY ALSO ALTER THE MODULATION OF BDNF UNDER ACUTE STRESSFUL CONDITIONS. IN SUMMARY, THERE IS GOOD AGREEMENT IN CONSIDERING NEURONAL PLASTICITY, AND THE EXPRESSION OF KEY PROTEINS SUCH AS THE NEUROTROPHIN BDNF, AS A CENTRAL PLAYER FOR THE EFFECTS OF STRESS ON BRAIN FUNCTION AND ITS IMPLICATION FOR PSYCHOPATHOLOGY. ACCORDINGLY, EFFECTIVE TREATMENTS SHOULD NOT LIMIT THEIR EFFECTS TO THE CONTROL OF NEUROTRANSMITTER AND HORMONAL DYSFUNCTIONS, BUT SHOULD BE ABLE TO NORMALIZE DEFECTIVE MECHANISMS THAT SUSTAIN THE IMPAIRMENT OF NEURONAL PLASTICITY. 2009 11 2598 28 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 12 5818 40 STRESS AND TRAUMA: BDNF CONTROL OF DENDRITIC-SPINE FORMATION AND REGRESSION. CHRONIC RESTRAINT STRESS LEADS TO INCREASES IN BRAIN DERIVED NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR (BDNF) MRNA AND PROTEIN IN SOME REGIONS OF THE BRAIN, E.G. THE BASAL LATERAL AMYGDALA (BLA) BUT DECREASES IN OTHER REGIONS SUCH AS THE CA3 REGION OF THE HIPPOCAMPUS AND DENDRITIC SPINE DENSITY INCREASES OR DECREASES IN LINE WITH THESE CHANGES IN BDNF. GIVEN THE POWERFUL INFLUENCE THAT BDNF HAS ON DENDRITIC SPINE GROWTH, THESE OBSERVATIONS SUGGEST THAT THE FUNDAMENTAL REASON FOR THE DIRECTION AND EXTENT OF CHANGES IN DENDRITIC SPINE DENSITY IN A PARTICULAR REGION OF THE BRAIN UNDER STRESS IS DUE TO THE CHANGES IN BDNF THERE. THE MOST LIKELY CAUSE OF THESE CHANGES IS PROVIDED BY THE STRESS INITIATED RELEASE OF STEROIDS, WHICH READILY ENTER NEURONS AND ALTER GENE EXPRESSION, FOR EXAMPLE THAT OF BDNF. OF PARTICULAR INTEREST IS HOW GLUCOCORTICOIDS AND MINERALOCORTICOIDS TEND TO HAVE OPPOSITE EFFECTS ON BDNF GENE EXPRESSION OFFERING THE POSSIBILITY THAT DIFFERENCES IN THE DISTRIBUTION OF THEIR RECEPTORS AND OF THEIR DOWNSTREAM EFFECTS MIGHT PROVIDE A BASIS FOR THE DIFFERENTIAL TRANSCRIPTION OF THE BDNF GENES. ALTERNATIVELY, DIFFERENCES IN THE EXTENT OF METHYLATION AND ACETYLATION IN THE EPIGENETIC CONTROL OF BDNF TRANSCRIPTION ARE POSSIBLE IN DIFFERENT PARTS OF THE BRAIN FOLLOWING STRESS. ALTHOUGH PRESENT EVIDENCE POINTS TO CHANGES IN BDNF TRANSCRIPTION BEING THE MAJOR CAUSAL AGENT FOR THE CHANGES IN SPINE DENSITY IN DIFFERENT PARTS OF THE BRAIN FOLLOWING STRESS, STEROIDS HAVE SIGNIFICANT EFFECTS ON DOWNSTREAM PATHWAYS FROM THE TRKB RECEPTOR ONCE IT IS ACTED UPON BY BDNF, INCLUDING THOSE THAT MODULATE THE DENSITY OF DENDRITIC SPINES. FINALLY, ALTHOUGH GLUCOCORTICOIDS PLAY A CANONICAL ROLE IN DETERMINING BDNF MODULATION OF DENDRITIC SPINES, RECENT STUDIES HAVE SHOWN A ROLE FOR CORTICOTROPHIN RELEASING FACTOR (CRF) IN THIS REGARD. THERE IS CONSIDERABLE IMPROVEMENT IN THE EXTENT OF CHANGES IN SPINE SIZE AND DENSITY IN RODENTS WITH FOREBRAIN SPECIFIC KNOCKOUT OF CRF RECEPTOR 1 (CRFR1) EVEN WHEN THE GLUCOCORTICOID PATHWAYS ARE LEFT INTACT. IT SEEMS THEN THAT CRF DOES HAVE A ROLE TO PLAY IN DETERMINING BDNF CONTROL OF DENDRITIC SPINES. 2014 13 110 33 A ROLE FOR ACTIVITY-DEPENDENT EPIGENETICS IN THE DEVELOPMENT AND TREATMENT OF MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER. CHRONIC STRESSORS, DURING DEVELOPMENTAL SENSITIVE PERIODS AND BEYOND, CONTRIBUTE TO THE RISK OF DEVELOPING PSYCHIATRIC CONDITIONS, INCLUDING MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER (MDD). EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS INCLUDING DNA METHYLATION AND HISTONE MODIFICATIONS, AT KEY STRESS RESPONSE AND NEUROTROPHIN GENES, ARE INCREASINGLY IMPLICATED IN MEDIATING THIS RISK. ALTHOUGH THE EXACT MECHANISMS THROUGH WHICH STRESSFUL ENVIRONMENTAL STIMULI ALTER THE EPIGENOME ARE STILL UNCLEAR, RESEARCH FROM THE LEARNING AND MEMORY FIELDS INDICATES THAT EPIGENOMIC MARKS CAN BE ALTERED, AT LEAST IN PART, THROUGH CALCIUM-DEPENDENT SIGNALING CASCADES IN DIRECT RESPONSE TO NEURONAL ACTIVITY. IN THIS REVIEW, WE HIGHLIGHT KEY FINDINGS FROM THE STRESS, MDD, AND LEARNING AND MEMORY FIELDS TO PROPOSE A MODEL WHERE STRESS REGULATES DOWNSTREAM CELLULAR FUNCTIONING THROUGH ACTIVITY-DEPENDENT EPIGENETIC CHANGES. FURTHERMORE, WE SUGGEST THAT BOTH TYPICAL AND NOVEL ANTIDEPRESSANT TREATMENTS MAY EXERT POSITIVE INFLUENCE THROUGH SIMILAR, ACTIVITY-DEPENDENT PATHWAYS. 2018 14 3313 36 HIPPOCAMPAL BDNF IN PHYSIOLOGICAL CONDITIONS AND SOCIAL ISOLATION. EXPOSURE OF AN ORGANISM TO CHRONIC PSYCHOSOCIAL STRESS MAY AFFECT BRAIN-DERIVED NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR (BDNF) EXPRESSION THAT HAS BEEN IMPLICATED IN THE ETIOLOGY OF PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS, SUCH AS DEPRESSION. GIVEN THAT DEPRESSION IN HUMANS HAS BEEN LINKED WITH SOCIAL STRESS, THE CHRONIC SOCIAL STRESS PARADIGMS FOR MODELING PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS IN ANIMALS HAVE THUS BEEN DEVELOPED. CHRONIC SOCIAL ISOLATION IN ANIMAL MODELS GENERALLY CAUSES CHANGES IN HYPOTHALAMIC-PITUITARY-ADRENAL AXIS FUNCTIONING, ASSOCIATED WITH ANXIETY- AND DEPRESSIVE-LIKE BEHAVIORS. ALSO, THIS CHRONIC STRESS CAUSES DOWNREGULATION OF BDNF PROTEIN AND MRNA IN THE HIPPOCAMPUS, A STRESS-SENSITIVE BRAIN REGION CLOSELY RELATED TO THE PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF DEPRESSION. IN THIS REVIEW, WE DISCUSS THE CURRENT KNOWLEDGE REGARDING THE STRUCTURE, FUNCTION, INTRACELLULAR SIGNALING, INTER-INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES AND EPIGENETIC REGULATION OF BDNF IN BOTH PHYSIOLOGICAL CONDITIONS AND DEPRESSION AND CHANGES IN CORTICOSTERONE LEVELS, AS A MARKER OF STRESS RESPONSE. SINCE BDNF LEVELS ARE AGE DEPENDENT IN HUMANS AND RODENTS, THIS REVIEW WILL ALSO HIGHLIGHT THE EFFECTS OF ADOLESCENT AND ADULT CHRONIC SOCIAL ISOLATION MODELS OF BOTH GENDERS ON THE BDNF EXPRESSION. 2017 15 291 39 AGING AND STRESS: PAST HYPOTHESES, PRESENT APPROACHES AND PERSPECTIVES. BRAIN AGING HAS BEEN SUGGESTED TO BE CONDITIONED BY AN EXCESSIVE GLUCOCORTIOID SECRETION LEADING TO DAMAGES ON BRAIN AREAS INVOLVED NOT ONLY IN COGNITIVE AND EMOTIONAL PROCESSES BUT ALSO IN THE CONTROL OF THE ACTIVITY OF THE HYPOTHALAMIC-PITUITARY ADRENAL AXIS. THIS REVIEW DESCRIBES SOME OF THE HYPOTHESIS THAT TRY TO EXPLAIN THE RELATION BETWEEN THE DYSREGULATION OF THE STRESS RESPONSE AND BRAIN AGING, FOCUSING ON CORTICOSTERONE BUT ALSO ON NEUROTRANSMISSION IN THE HIPPOCAMPUS, THE PREFRONTAL CORTEX AND THE AMYGDALA. MOREOVER, DIFFERENT MOLECULAR FACTORS CAN ACCOUNT FOR AN ENHANCED VULNERABILITY OF THE AGED BRAIN TO STRESS EXPOSURE, SPECIALLY FOR RESILIENCE. AMONG THEM, GOOD CANDIDATES COULD BE THOSE MECHANISMS DETERMINING THE LEVELS OF CORTICOSTERONE IN THE BRAIN, SEVERAL MOLECULES DOWNSTREAM GLUCOCORTICOID RECEPTOR ACTIVATION (IE: HEAT SHOCK PROTEINS, BAG-1) OR EVEN THE EPIGENETIC PROGRAMMING OF THE HPA AXIS IN EARLY STAGES. IN CONCLUSION, GENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS (EARLY LIFE STRESS, CHRONIC STRESS DURING ADULTHOOD) CAN PRODUCE AN ENHANCED VULNERABILITY AND A REDUCED RESILIENCE OF THE BRAIN TO SUBSEQUENT STRESS EXPOSURES OR TO METABOLIC CHALLENGES LEADING, IN TURN, TO AN UNSUCCESSFUL AGING OF THE BRAIN. HOWEVER, RESULTS OBTAINED WITH THE USE OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL ENRICHMENT MODEL IN ANIMALS, ADDED TO SEVERAL RESULTS IN HUMANS ALSO DESCRIBED IN THIS REVIEW SUGGEST THAT POSITIVE ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS (COGNITIVE-DEMANDING TASKS OR PHYSICAL EXERCISE) CAN HELP TO MAINTAIN NEURONAL PLASTICITY DURING AGING AND TO PROTECT THE BRAIN AGAINST THE DAMAGING EFFECTS OF STRESS EXPOSURE. 2011 16 5199 42 PRENATAL MATERNAL STRESS IS ASSOCIATED WITH INCREASED SENSITIVITY TO NEUROPATHIC PAIN AND SEX-SPECIFIC CHANGES IN SUPRASPINAL MRNA EXPRESSION OF EPIGENETIC- AND STRESS-RELATED GENES IN ADULTHOOD. EXPOSURE TO PRENATAL MATERNAL STRESS IMPACTS ADULT BEHAVIORAL OUTCOMES AND HAS BEEN SUGGESTED AS A RISK FACTOR FOR CHRONIC PAIN. HOWEVER, THE NEUROBIOLOGICAL MECHANISMS IMPLICATED ARE NOT WELL-CHARACTERIZED. IN THIS STUDY, WE ANALYZED THE EFFECT OF A PRENATAL MATERNAL STRESS ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF NEUROPATHIC PAIN-RELATED BEHAVIOURS AND GENE EXPRESSION IN THE FRONTAL CORTEX AND HIPPOCAMPUS IN ADULT OFFSPRING FOLLOWING CHRONIC CONSTRICTION INJURY OF THE SCIATIC NERVE IN MALE AND FEMALE CD1 MICE. NERVE INJURY-INDUCED MECHANICAL HYPERSENSITIVITY WAS AMPLIFIED IN BOTH MALE AND FEMALE PRENATALLY-STRESSED OFFSPRING, SUGGESTING THAT PRENATAL STRESS EXACERBATES PAIN AFTER INJURY. ANALYSIS OF MRNA EXPRESSION OF GENES RELATED TO EPIGENETIC REGULATION AND STRESS RESPONSES IN THE FRONTAL CORTEX AND HIPPOCAMPUS, BRAIN STRUCTURES IMPLICATED IN CHRONIC PAIN, SHOWED DISTINCT SEX AND REGION-SPECIFIC PATTERNS OF DYSREGULATION. IN GENERAL, MRNA EXPRESSION WAS MOST FREQUENTLY ALTERED IN THE MALE HIPPOCAMPUS AND EFFECTS OF PRENATAL STRESS WERE MORE PREVALENT THAN EFFECTS OF NERVE INJURY IN BOTH SUPRASPINAL AREAS. THESE FINDINGS DEMONSTRATE THE IMPACT OF PRENATAL STRESS ON BEHAVIORAL SENSITIVITY TO A PAINFUL INJURY. CHANGES IN THE EXPRESSION OF EPIGENETIC- AND STRESS-RELATED GENES SUGGEST A POSSIBLE MECHANISM BY WHICH THE EARLY LIFE STRESS BECOMES EMBEDDED IN THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM. INCREASED UNDERSTANDING OF THE INTERACTIONS AMONG EARLY-LIFE STRESS, SEX, AND PAIN MAY LEAD TO THE IDENTIFICATION OF NOVEL THERAPEUTIC TARGETS AND EPIGENETIC DRUGS FOR THE TREATMENT OF CHRONIC PAIN DISORDERS. 2020 17 997 29 CHRONIC STRESS-DRIVEN GLUCOCORTICOID RECEPTOR ACTIVATION PROGRAMS KEY CELL PHENOTYPES AND FUNCTIONAL EPIGENOMIC PATTERNS IN HUMAN FIBROBLASTS. CHRONIC ENVIRONMENTAL STRESS CAN PROFOUNDLY IMPACT CELL AND BODY FUNCTION. ALTHOUGH THE UNDERLYING MECHANISMS ARE POORLY UNDERSTOOD, EPIGENETICS HAS EMERGED AS A KEY LINK BETWEEN ENVIRONMENT AND HEALTH. THE GENOMIC EFFECTS OF STRESS ARE THOUGHT TO BE MEDIATED BY THE ACTION OF GLUCOCORTICOID STRESS HORMONES, PRIMARILY CORTISOL IN HUMANS, WHICH ACT VIA THE GLUCOCORTICOID RECEPTOR (GR). TO DISSECT HOW CHRONIC STRESS-DRIVEN GR ACTIVATION INFLUENCES EPIGENETIC AND CELL STATES, HUMAN FIBROBLASTS UNDERWENT PROLONGED EXPOSURE TO PHYSIOLOGICAL STRESS LEVELS OF CORTISOL AND/OR A SELECTIVE GR ANTAGONIST. CORTISOL WAS FOUND TO DRIVE ROBUST CHANGES IN CELL PROLIFERATION, MIGRATION, AND MORPHOLOGY, WHICH WERE ABROGATED BY CONCOMITANT GR BLOCKADE. THE GR-DRIVEN CELL PHENOTYPES WERE ACCOMPANIED BY WIDESPREAD, YET GENOMIC CONTEXT-DEPENDENT, CHANGES IN DNA METHYLATION AND MRNA EXPRESSION, INCLUDING GENE LOCI WITH KNOWN ROLES IN CELL PROLIFERATION AND MIGRATION. THESE FINDINGS PROVIDE INSIGHTS INTO HOW CHRONIC STRESS-DRIVEN FUNCTIONAL EPIGENOMIC PATTERNS BECOME ESTABLISHED TO SHAPE KEY CELL PHENOTYPES. 2022 18 2520 32 EPIGENETICS AND THE GLUCOCORTICOID RECEPTOR: A REVIEW OF THE IMPLICATIONS IN DEPRESSION. DEPRESSION IS A SERIOUS PSYCHIATRIC DISORDER THAT EFFECTS AT LEAST 350 MILLION PEOPLE WORLDWIDE TODAY. DYSREGULATION OF THE HYPOTHALAMIC-PITUITARY-ADRENAL AXIS (HPAA) IS A ROBUST FINDING IN THE PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF DEPRESSION. THIS DYSREGULATION IS HYPOTHESIZED TO RESULT FROM ALTERED CENTRAL GLUCOCORTICOID RECEPTOR (GR) LEVELS AND/OR FUNCTION AS A CONSEQUENCE OF CHRONIC GLUCOCORTICOID (GC) RELEASE, LEADING TO RECEPTOR RESISTANCE. PIVOTAL ANIMAL AND HUMAN RESEARCH TO DATE HAS IDENTIFIED THAT EARLY LIFE EXPOSURE TO PROLONGED LEVELS OF GCS, STRESS AND/OR DEPRESSION, CAN INDUCE EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS AT KEY REGIONS ON THE GR GENE THAT LEAD TO ALTERATIONS IN GR EXPRESSION AND FUNCTION. EPIGENETICS PROVIDES AN ATTRACTIVE MECHANISM TO EXPLAIN HOW ONES' GENES AND ENVIRONMENT CAN INTERACT TO PRODUCE DIFFERENT DISEASE PHENOTYPES. THIS REVIEW AIMS TO COMPILE THE INFORMATION THAT HAS BEEN COLLECTED TO DATE AND TO IDENTIFY KEY AREAS FOR FURTHER INVESTIGATION. 2016 19 4118 30 MECHANISMS OF BRAIN GLUCOCORTICOID RESISTANCE IN STRESS-INDUCED PSYCHOPATHOLOGIES. EXPOSURE TO STRESS ACTIVATES THE HYPOTHALAMIC-PITUITARY-ADRENAL AXIS AND LEADS TO INCREASED LEVELS OF GLUCOCORTICOID (GC) HORMONES. PROLONGED ELEVATION OF GC LEVELS CAUSES NEURONAL DYSFUNCTION, DECREASES THE DENSITY OF SYNAPSES, AND IMPAIRS NEURONAL PLASTICITY. DECREASED SENSITIVITY TO GLUCOCORTICOIDS (GLUCOCORTICOID RESISTANCE) THAT DEVELOPS AS A RESULT OF CHRONIC STRESS IS ONE OF THE CHARACTERISTIC FEATURES OF STRESS-INDUCED PSYCHOPATHOLOGIES. IN THIS ARTICLE, WE REVIEWED THE PUBLISHED DATA ON PROPOSED MOLECULAR MECHANISMS THAT CONTRIBUTE TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF GLUCOCORTICOID RESISTANCE IN BRAIN, INCLUDING CHANGES IN THE EXPRESSION OF THE GLUCOCORTICOID RECEPTOR (GR) GENE, BIOSYNTHESIS OF GR ISOFORMS, AND GR POSTTRANSLATIONAL MODIFICATIONS. WE ALSO PRESENT DATA ON ALTERATIONS IN THE EXPRESSION OF THE FKBP5 GENE ENCODING THE MAIN COMPONENT OF CELL ULTRA-SHORT NEGATIVE FEEDBACK LOOP OF GC SIGNALING REGULATION. RECENT DISCOVERIES ON STRESS- AND GR-INDUCED CHANGES IN EPIGENETIC MODIFICATION PATTERNS AS WELL AS NORMALIZING ACTION OF ANTIDEPRESSANTS ARE DISCUSSED. GR AND FKBP5 GENE POLYMORPHISMS ASSOCIATED WITH STRESS-INDUCED PSYCHOPATHOLOGIES ARE DESCRIBED, AND THEIR ROLE IN GLUCOCORTICOID RESISTANCE IS DISCUSSED. 2017 20 5828 35 STRESS, EPIGENETICS, AND ALCOHOLISM. ACUTE AND CHRONIC STRESSORS HAVE BEEN ASSOCIATED WITH ALTERATIONS IN MOOD AND INCREASED ANXIETY THAT MAY EVENTUALLY RESULT IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF STRESS-RELATED PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS. STRESS AND ASSOCIATED DISORDERS, INCLUDING ANXIETY, ARE KEY FACTORS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF ALCOHOLISM BECAUSE ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION CAN TEMPORARILY REDUCE THE DRINKER'S DYSPHORIA. ONE MOLECULE THAT MAY HELP MEDIATE THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN STRESS AND ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION IS BRAIN-DERIVED NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR (BDNF), A PROTEIN THAT REGULATES THE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF THE SITES WHERE TWO NERVE CELLS INTERACT AND EXCHANGE NERVE SIGNALS (I.E., SYNAPSES) AND WHICH IS INVOLVED IN NUMEROUS PHYSIOLOGICAL PROCESSES. ABERRANT REGULATION OF BDNF SIGNALING AND ALTERATIONS IN SYNAPSE ACTIVITY (I.E., SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY) HAVE BEEN ASSOCIATED WITH THE PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF STRESS-RELATED DISORDERS AND ALCOHOLISM. MECHANISMS THAT CONTRIBUTE TO THE REGULATION OF GENETIC INFORMATION WITHOUT MODIFICATION OF THE DNA SEQUENCE (I.E., EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS) MAY PLAY A ROLE IN THE COMPLEX CONTROL OF BDNF SIGNALING AND SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY-FOR EXAMPLE, BY MODIFYING THE STRUCTURE OF THE DNA-PROTEIN COMPLEXES (I.E., CHROMATIN) THAT MAKE UP THE CHROMOSOMES AND THEREBY MODULATING THE EXPRESSION OF CERTAIN GENES. STUDIES REGARDING THE EPIGENETIC CONTROL OF BDNF SIGNALING AND SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY PROVIDE A PROMISING DIRECTION TO UNDERSTAND THE MECHANISMS MEDIATING THE INTERACTION BETWEEN STRESS AND ALCOHOLISM. 2012