1 6525 168 TRANSCRIPTIONAL AND EPIGENETIC SUBSTRATES OF METHAMPHETAMINE ADDICTION AND WITHDRAWAL: EVIDENCE FROM A LONG-ACCESS SELF-ADMINISTRATION MODEL IN THE RAT. METHAMPHETAMINE USE DISORDER IS A CHRONIC NEUROPSYCHIATRIC DISORDER CHARACTERIZED BY RECURRENT BINGE EPISODES, INTERVALS OF ABSTINENCE, AND RELAPSES TO DRUG USE. HUMANS ADDICTED TO METHAMPHETAMINE EXPERIENCE VARIOUS DEGREES OF COGNITIVE DEFICITS AND OTHER NEUROLOGICAL ABNORMALITIES THAT COMPLICATE THEIR ACTIVITIES OF DAILY LIVING AND THEIR PARTICIPATION IN TREATMENT PROGRAMS. IMPORTANTLY, MODELS OF METHAMPHETAMINE ADDICTION IN RODENTS HAVE SHOWN THAT ANIMALS WILL READILY LEARN TO GIVE THEMSELVES METHAMPHETAMINE. RATS ALSO ACCELERATE THEIR INTAKE OVER TIME. MICROARRAY STUDIES HAVE ALSO SHOWN THAT METHAMPHETAMINE TAKING IS ASSOCIATED WITH MAJOR TRANSCRIPTIONAL CHANGES IN THE STRIATUM MEASURED WITHIN A SHORT OR LONGER TIME AFTER CESSATION OF DRUG TAKING. AFTER A 2-H WITHDRAWAL TIME, THERE WAS INCREASED EXPRESSION OF GENES THAT PARTICIPATE IN TRANSCRIPTION REGULATION. THESE INCLUDED CYCLIC AMP RESPONSE ELEMENT BINDING (CREB), ETS DOMAIN-CONTAINING PROTEIN (ELK1), AND MEMBERS OF THE FOS FAMILY OF TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS. OTHER GENES OF INTEREST INCLUDE BRAIN-DERIVED NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR (BDNF), TYROSINE KINASE RECEPTOR, TYPE 2 (TRKB), AND SYNAPTOPHYSIN. METHAMPHETAMINE-INDUCED TRANSCRIPTION WAS FOUND TO BE REGULATED VIA PHOSPHORYLATED CREB-DEPENDENT EVENTS. AFTER A 30-DAY WITHDRAWAL FROM METHAMPHETAMINE SELF-ADMINISTRATION, HOWEVER, THERE WAS MOSTLY DECREASED EXPRESSION OF TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS INCLUDING JUND. THERE WAS ALSO DOWNREGULATION OF GENES WHOSE PROTEIN PRODUCTS ARE CONSTITUENTS OF CHROMATIN-REMODELING COMPLEXES. ALTOGETHER, THESE GENOME-WIDE RESULTS SHOW THAT METHAMPHETAMINE ABUSE MIGHT BE ASSOCIATED WITH ALTERED REGULATION OF A DIVERSITY OF GENE NETWORKS THAT IMPACT CELLULAR AND SYNAPTIC FUNCTIONS. THESE TRANSCRIPTIONAL CHANGES MIGHT SERVE AS TRIGGERS FOR THE NEUROPSYCHIATRIC PRESENTATIONS OF HUMANS WHO ABUSE THIS DRUG. BETTER UNDERSTANDING OF THE WAY THAT GENE PRODUCTS INTERACT TO CAUSE METHAMPHETAMINE ADDICTION WILL HELP TO DEVELOP BETTER PHARMACOLOGICAL TREATMENT OF METHAMPHETAMINE ADDICTS. 2015 2 5624 33 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 3 2013 47 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 4 5649 28 SEX DIFFERENCES IN PSYCHOSTIMULANT ABUSE: IMPLICATIONS FOR ESTROGEN RECEPTORS AND HISTONE DEACETYLASES. SUBSTANCE ABUSE IS A CHRONIC PATHOLOGICAL DISORDER THAT NEGATIVELY AFFECTS MANY HEALTH AND NEUROLOGICAL PROCESSES. A GROWING BODY OF LITERATURE HAS REVEALED GENDER DIFFERENCES IN SUBSTANCE USE. COMPARED TO MEN, WOMEN DISPLAY DISTINCT DRUG-USE PHENOTYPES ACCOMPANIED BY RECOVERY AND REHABILITATION DISPARITIES. THESE OBSERVATIONS HAVE LED TO THE NOTION THAT SEX-DEPENDENT SUSCEPTIBILITIES EXIST ALONG THE PROGRESSION TO ADDICTION. WITHIN THIS SCOPE, NEUROADAPTATIONS FOLLOWING PSYCHOSTIMULANT EXPOSURE ARE THOUGHT TO BE DISTINCT FOR EACH SEX. THIS REVIEW SUMMARIZES CLINICAL FINDINGS AND ANIMAL RESEARCH REPORTING SEX DIFFERENCES IN THE SUBJECTIVE AND BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES TO COCAINE, METHAMPHETAMINE, AND NICOTINE. THIS DISCUSSION IS FOLLOWED BY AN EXAMINATION OF EPIGENETIC AND MOLECULAR ALTERATIONS IMPLICATED IN THE ADDICTION PROCESS. SPECIAL CONSIDERATION IS GIVEN TO HISTONE DEACETYLASES AND ESTROGEN RECEPTOR-MEDIATED GENE EXPRESSION. 2022 5 6174 50 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 6 4653 36 NEUROSCIENCE OF ALCOHOLISM: MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR MECHANISMS. ALCOHOL USE AND ABUSE APPEAR TO BE RELATED TO NEUROADAPTIVE CHANGES AT FUNCTIONAL, NEUROCHEMICAL, AND STRUCTURAL LEVELS. ACUTE AND CHRONIC ETHANOL EXPOSURE HAVE BEEN SHOWN TO MODULATE FUNCTION OF THE ACTIVITY-DEPENDENT GENE TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR, CAMP-RESPONSIVE ELEMENT BINDING (CREB) PROTEIN IN THE BRAIN, WHICH MAY BE ASSOCIATED WITH THE DEVELOPMENT OF ALCOHOLISM. STUDY OF THE DOWNSTREAM EFFECTORS OF CREB HAVE IDENTIFIED SEVERAL IMPORTANT CREB-RELATED GENES, SUCH AS NEUROPEPTIDE Y, BRAIN-DERIVED NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR, ACTIVITY-REGULATED CYTOSKELETON-ASSOCIATED PROTEIN, AND CORTICOTROPHIN-RELEASING FACTOR, THAT MAY PLAY A CRUCIAL ROLE IN THE BEHAVIORAL EFFECTS OF ETHANOL AND MOLECULAR CHANGES IN THE SPECIFIC NEUROCIRCUITRY THAT UNDERLIE BOTH ALCOHOL ADDICTION AND A GENETIC PREDISPOSITION TO ALCOHOLISM. BRAIN CHROMATIN REMODELING DUE TO HISTONE COVALENT MODIFICATIONS MAY ALSO BE INVOLVED IN MEDIATING THE BEHAVIORAL EFFECTS AND NEUROADAPTIVE CHANGES THAT OCCUR DURING ETHANOL EXPOSURE. THIS REVIEW OUTLINES PROGRESSIVE NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH INTO MOLECULAR AND EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS OF ALCOHOLISM. 2010 7 4401 45 MODULATION OF NEURONAL PLASTICITY FOLLOWING CHRONIC CONCOMITANT ADMINISTRATION OF THE NOVEL ANTIPSYCHOTIC LURASIDONE WITH THE MOOD STABILIZER VALPROIC ACID. RATIONALE: COMBINATORY THERAPY IS WIDELY USED IN PSYCHIATRY OWING TO THE POSSIBILITY THAT DRUGS WITH DIFFERENT MECHANISMS OF ACTION MAY SYNERGIZE TO IMPROVE FUNCTIONS DETERIORATED IN SCHIZOPHRENIA, BIPOLAR DISORDERS, AND MAJOR DEPRESSION. WHILE COMBINATORY STRATEGIES RELY ON RECEPTOR AND SYNAPTIC MECHANISMS, IT SHOULD ALSO BE CONSIDERED THAT TWO DRUGS MAY ALSO "INTERACT" ON THE LONG-TERM TO DETERMINE MORE ROBUST CHANGES IN NEURONAL PLASTICITY, WHICH REPRESENTS A DOWNSTREAM TARGET IMPORTANT FOR FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY. OBJECTIVE: THE AIM OF THE STUDY IS TO INVESTIGATE NEUROADAPTIVE CHANGES SET IN MOTION BY CHRONIC CONCOMITANT ADMINISTRATION OF THE NOVEL ANTIPSYCHOTIC LURASIDONE AND THE MOOD STABILIZER VALPROATE. METHODS: ANIMALS WERE CHRONICALLY TREATED WITH LURASIDONE, VALPROATE, OR THE COMBINATION OF THE TWO DRUGS AND KILLED 24 H AFTER THE LAST INJECTION TO EVALUATE ALTERATIONS OF DIFFERENT MEASURES OF NEURONAL PLASTICITY SUCH AS THE NEUROTROPHIN BRAIN-DERIVED NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR (BDNF), THE IMMEDIATE EARLY GENE ACTIVITY-REGULATED CYTOSKELETAL ASSOCIATED PROTEIN, AND THE EPIGENETIC REGULATORS HDAC 1, 2, AND 5 IN DORSAL AND VENTRAL HIPPOCAMPUS. RESULTS: THE RESULTS SUGGEST THAT COADMINISTRATION OF LURASIDONE AND VALPROATE PRODUCES, WHEN COMPARED TO THE SINGLE DRUGS, A LARGER INCREASE IN THE EXPRESSION OF BDNF IN THE VENTRAL HIPPOCAMPUS, THROUGH THE REGULATION OF SPECIFIC NEUROTROPHIN TRANSCRIPTS. WE ALSO FOUND THAT THE HISTONE DEACETYLASES WERE REGULATED BY THE DRUG COMBINATION, SUGGESTING THAT SOME OF THE TRANSCRIPTIONAL CHANGES MAY BE SUSTAINED BY EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS. CONCLUSIONS: OUR RESULTS SUGGEST THAT THE BENEFICIAL EFFECTS ASSOCIATED WITH COMBINATORY TREATMENT BETWEEN A SECOND-GENERATION ANTIPSYCHOTIC AND A MOOD STABILIZER COULD RESULT FROM THE ABILITY TO MODULATE NEUROPLASTIC MOLECULES, WHOSE EXPRESSION AND FUNCTION IS DETERIORATED IN DIFFERENT PSYCHIATRIC CONDITIONS. 2013 8 3952 28 LOCUS-SPECIFIC EPIGENETIC REMODELING CONTROLS ADDICTION- AND DEPRESSION-RELATED BEHAVIORS. CHRONIC EXPOSURE TO DRUGS OF ABUSE OR STRESS REGULATES TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS, CHROMATIN-MODIFYING ENZYMES AND HISTONE POST-TRANSLATIONAL MODIFICATIONS IN DISCRETE BRAIN REGIONS. GIVEN THE PROMISCUITY OF THE ENZYMES INVOLVED, IT HAS NOT YET BEEN POSSIBLE TO OBTAIN DIRECT CAUSAL EVIDENCE TO IMPLICATE THE REGULATION OF TRANSCRIPTION AND CONSEQUENT BEHAVIORAL PLASTICITY BY CHROMATIN REMODELING THAT OCCURS AT A SINGLE GENE. WE INVESTIGATED THE MECHANISM LINKING CHROMATIN DYNAMICS TO NEUROBIOLOGICAL PHENOMENA BY APPLYING ENGINEERED TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS TO SELECTIVELY MODIFY CHROMATIN AT A SPECIFIC MOUSE GENE IN VIVO. WE FOUND THAT HISTONE METHYLATION OR ACETYLATION AT THE FOSB LOCUS IN NUCLEUS ACCUMBENS, A BRAIN REWARD REGION, WAS SUFFICIENT TO CONTROL DRUG- AND STRESS-EVOKED TRANSCRIPTIONAL AND BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES VIA INTERACTIONS WITH THE ENDOGENOUS TRANSCRIPTIONAL MACHINERY. THIS APPROACH ALLOWED US TO RELATE THE EPIGENETIC LANDSCAPE AT A GIVEN GENE DIRECTLY TO REGULATION OF ITS EXPRESSION AND TO ITS SUBSEQUENT EFFECTS ON REWARD BEHAVIOR. 2014 9 883 46 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 10 2489 29 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 11 584 49 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 12 1790 34 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 13 6207 40 THE INHIBITION OF HISTONE DEACETYLASES REDUCES THE REINSTATEMENT OF COCAINE-SEEKING BEHAVIOR IN RATS. DRUG ADDICTION IS A CHRONIC BRAIN DISEASE CHARACTERIZED BY A PERSISTENT RISK OF RELAPSE, EVEN AFTER A LONG PERIOD OF ABSTINENCE. A CURRENT HYPOTHESIS STATES THAT RELAPSE RESULTS FROM LASTING NEUROADAPTATIONS THAT ARE INDUCED IN RESPONSE TO REPEATED DRUG ADMINISTRATION. THE ADAPTATIONS REQUIRE GENE EXPRESSION, SOME OF WHICH BEING UNDER THE CONTROL OF STABLE EPIGENETIC REGULATIONS. WE HAVE PREVIOUSLY DEMONSTRATED THAT PRETREATMENT WITH HISTONE DEACETYLASE (HDAC) INHIBITORS REDUCES THE COCAINE REINFORCING PROPERTIES AS WELL AS THE MOTIVATION OF RATS FOR COCAINE. WE SHOW HERE THAT THE SAME HDAC INHIBITORS, TRICHOSTATIN A AND PHENYLBUTYRATE, SIGNIFICANTLY REDUCED THE COCAINE-SEEKING BEHAVIOR INDUCED BY THE COMBINATION OF A COCAINE INJECTION TOGETHER WITH THE EXPOSURE TO A LIGHT CUE PREVIOUSLY ASSOCIATED WITH COCAINE TAKING. REINSTATEMENT OF DRUG-SEEKING BEHAVIOR WAS CARRIED OUT AFTER A 3-WEEK WITHDRAWAL PERIOD, WHICH CAME AFTER TEN DAILY SESSIONS OF COCAINE INTRAVENOUS SELF-ADMINISTRATION. OUR RESULTS SUGGEST THAT PHARMACOLOGICAL TREATMENT AIMED AT MODULATING EPIGENETIC REGULATION, AND PARTICULARLY TREATMENT THAT WOULD INHIBIT HDAC ACTIVITY, COULD REDUCE THE RISK OF RELAPSE, A MAJOR DRAWBACK IN THE TREATMENT OF DRUG ADDICTION. 2011 14 5818 47 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 15 6801 57 [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 16 2513 28 EPIGENETICS AND PSYCHOSTIMULANT ADDICTION. CHRONIC DRUG EXPOSURE ALTERS GENE EXPRESSION IN THE BRAIN AND PRODUCES LONG-TERM CHANGES IN NEURAL NETWORKS THAT UNDERLIE COMPULSIVE DRUG TAKING AND SEEKING. EXACTLY HOW DRUG-INDUCED CHANGES IN SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY AND SUBSEQUENT GENE EXPRESSION ARE TRANSLATED INTO PERSISTENT NEUROADAPTATIONS REMAINS UNCLEAR. EMERGING EVIDENCE SUGGESTS THAT COMPLEX DRUG-INDUCED NEUROADAPTATIONS IN THE BRAIN ARE MEDIATED BY HIGHLY SYNCHRONIZED AND DYNAMIC PATTERNS OF GENE REGULATION. RECENTLY, IT HAS BECOME CLEAR THAT EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS CONTRIBUTE TO DRUG-INDUCED STRUCTURAL, SYNAPTIC, AND BEHAVIORAL PLASTICITY BY REGULATING EXPRESSION OF GENE NETWORKS. HERE WE REVIEW HOW ALTERATIONS IN HISTONE MODIFICATIONS, DNA METHYLATION, AND MICRORNAS REGULATE GENE EXPRESSION AND CONTRIBUTE TO PSYCHOSTIMULANT ADDICTION WITH A FOCUS ON THE EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS THAT REGULATE BRAIN-DERIVED NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR (BDNF) EXPRESSION FOLLOWING CHRONIC COCAINE EXPOSURE. IDENTIFYING EPIGENETIC SIGNATURES THAT DEFINE PSYCHOSTIMULANT ADDICTION MAY LEAD TO NOVEL, EFFICACIOUS TREATMENTS FOR DRUG CRAVING AND RELAPSE. 2013 17 2058 29 EPIGENETIC CONTROL OF GENE EXPRESSION IN THE ALCOHOLIC BRAIN. CHRONIC ALCOHOL EXPOSURE CAUSES WIDESPREAD CHANGES IN BRAIN GENE EXPRESSION IN HUMANS AND ANIMAL MODELS. MANY OF THESE CONTRIBUTE TO CELLULAR ADAPTATIONS THAT ULTIMATELY LEAD TO BEHAVIORAL TOLERANCE AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE. THERE IS AN EMERGING APPRECIATION FOR THE ROLE OF EPIGENETIC PROCESSES IN ALCOHOL-INDUCED CHANGES IN BRAIN GENE EXPRESSION AND BEHAVIOR. FOR EXAMPLE, CHRONIC ALCOHOL EXPOSURE PRODUCES CHANGES IN DNA AND HISTONE METHYLATION, HISTONE ACETYLATION, AND MICRORNA EXPRESSION THAT AFFECT EXPRESSION OF MULTIPLE GENES IN VARIOUS TYPES OF BRAIN CELLS (I.E., NEURONS AND GLIA) AND CONTRIBUTE TO BRAIN PATHOLOGY AND BRAIN PLASTICITY ASSOCIATED WITH ALCOHOL ABUSE AND DEPENDENCE. DRUGS TARGETING THE EPIGENETIC "MASTER REGULATORS" ARE EMERGING AS POTENTIAL THERAPEUTICS FOR NEURODEGENERATIVE DISORDERS AND DRUG ADDICTION. 2013 18 3587 41 IMPACT OF TLR4 ON BEHAVIORAL AND COGNITIVE DYSFUNCTIONS ASSOCIATED WITH ALCOHOL-INDUCED NEUROINFLAMMATORY DAMAGE. TOLL-LIKE RECEPTORS (TLRS) PLAY AN IMPORTANT ROLE IN THE INNATE IMMUNE RESPONSE, AND EMERGING EVIDENCE INDICATES THEIR ROLE IN BRAIN INJURY AND NEURODEGENERATION. OUR RECENT RESULTS HAVE DEMONSTRATED THAT ETHANOL IS CAPABLE OF ACTIVATING GLIAL TLR4 RECEPTORS AND THAT THE ELIMINATION OF THESE RECEPTORS IN MICE PROTECTS AGAINST ETHANOL-INDUCED GLIAL ACTIVATION, INDUCTION OF INFLAMMATORY MEDIATORS AND APOPTOSIS. THIS STUDY WAS DESIGNED TO ASSESS WHETHER ETHANOL-INDUCED INFLAMMATORY DAMAGE CAUSES BEHAVIORAL AND COGNITIVE CONSEQUENCES, AND IF BEHAVIORAL ALTERATIONS ARE DEPENDENT OF TLR4 FUNCTIONS. HERE WE SHOW IN MICE DRINKING ALCOHOL FOR 5MONTHS, FOLLOWED BY A 15-DAY WITHDRAWAL PERIOD, THAT ACTIVATION OF THE ASTROGLIAL AND MICROGLIAL CELLS IN FRONTAL CORTEX AND STRIATUM IS MAINTAINED AND THAT THESE EVENTS ARE ASSOCIATED WITH COGNITIVE AND ANXIETY-RELATED BEHAVIORAL IMPAIRMENTS IN WILD-TYPE (WT) MICE, AS DEMONSTRATED BY TESTING THE ANIMALS WITH OBJECT MEMORY RECOGNITION, CONDITIONED TASTE AVERSION AND DARK AND LIGHT BOX ANXIETY TASKS. MICE LACKING TLR4 RECEPTORS ARE PROTECTED AGAINST ETHANOL-INDUCED INFLAMMATORY DAMAGE, AND BEHAVIORAL ASSOCIATED EFFECTS. WE FURTHER ASSESS THE POSSIBILITY OF THE EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS PARTICIPATING IN SHORT- OR LONG-TERM BEHAVIORAL EFFECTS ASSOCIATED WITH NEUROINFLAMMATORY DAMAGE. WE SHOW THAT CHRONIC ALCOHOL TREATMENT DECREASES H4 HISTONE ACETYLATION AND HISTONE ACETYLTRANSFERASES ACTIVITY IN FRONTAL CORTEX, STRIATUM AND HIPPOCAMPUS OF WT MICE. ALTERATIONS IN CHROMATIN STRUCTURE WERE NOT OBSERVED IN TLR4(-/-) MICE. THESE RESULTS PROVIDE THE FIRST EVIDENCE OF THE ROLE THAT TLR4 FUNCTIONS PLAY IN THE BEHAVIORAL CONSEQUENCES OF ALCOHOL-INDUCED INFLAMMATORY DAMAGE AND SUGGEST THAT THE EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS MEDIATED BY TLR4 COULD CONTRIBUTE TO SHORT- OR LONG-TERM ALCOHOL-INDUCED BEHAVIORAL OR COGNITIVE DYSFUNCTIONS. 2011 19 6806 33 [EPIGENETICS AND DRUG ADDICTION: A FOCUS ON MECP2 AND ON HISTONE ACETYLATION]. CHRONIC DRUG EXPOSURE ALTERS GENE EXPRESSION IN THE BRAIN, WHICH IS BELIEVED TO UNDERLIE COMPULSIVE DRUG SEEKING AND DRUG TAKING BEHAVIOR. RECENT EVIDENCE SHOWS THAT DRUG-INDUCED LONG-TERM NEUROADAPTATIONS IN THE BRAIN ARE MEDIATED IN PART BY EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS. BY REMODELING CHROMATIN, THIS TYPE OF REGULATION CONTRIBUTES TO DRUG-INDUCED SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY THAT TRANSLATES INTO BEHAVIORAL MODIFICATIONS. HOW DRUG-INDUCED ALTERATIONS IN DNA METHYLATION REGULATE GENE EXPRESSION IS REVIEWED HERE, WITH A FOCUS ON MECP2, A PROTEIN BINDING METHYLATED DNA. THE IMPORTANCE OF HISTONE MODIFICATIONS, ESPECIALLY ACETYLATION IS ALSO DISCUSSED, WITH AN EMPHASIS ON THE EFFECTS OF INHIBITORS OF HISTONE DEACETYLASES ON DRUG-INDUCED BEHAVIORAL CHANGES. THE PRECISE IDENTIFICATION OF THE EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS THAT ARE UNDER THE CONTROL OF DRUGS OF ABUSE MAY HELP TO UNCOVER NOVEL TARGETS FOR THE TREATMENT OF DRUG SEEKING AND RELAPSE. 2015 20 4642 43 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