Browsing by Subject "MeCP2"
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Item Open Access MicroRNA-29 is an essential regulator of brain maturation through regulation of CH methylation.(Cell reports, 2021-04) Swahari, Vijay; Nakamura, Ayumi; Hollville, Emilie; Stroud, Hume; Simon, Jeremy M; Ptacek, Travis S; Beck, Matthew V; Flowers, Cornelius; Guo, Jiami; Plestant, Charlotte; Liang, Jie; Kurtz, C Lisa; Kanke, Matt; Hammond, Scott M; He, You-Wen; Anton, ES; Sethupathy, Praveen; Moy, Sheryl S; Greenberg, Michael E; Deshmukh, MohanishAlthough embryonic brain development and neurodegeneration have received considerable attention, the events that govern postnatal brain maturation are less understood. Here, we identify the miR-29 family to be strikingly induced during the late stages of brain maturation. Brain maturation is associated with a transient, postnatal period of de novo non-CG (CH) DNA methylation mediated by DNMT3A. We examine whether an important function of miR-29 during brain maturation is to restrict the period of CH methylation via its targeting of Dnmt3a. Deletion of miR-29 in the brain, or knockin mutations preventing miR-29 to specifically target Dnmt3a, result in increased DNMT3A expression, higher CH methylation, and repression of genes associated with neuronal activity and neuropsychiatric disorders. These mouse models also develop neurological deficits and premature lethality. Our results identify an essential role for miR-29 in restricting CH methylation in the brain and illustrate the importance of CH methylation regulation for normal brain maturation.Item Open Access Monoaminergic Regulation of MeCP2 Phosphorylation in Mouse Models of Psychiatric Disease(2011) Hutchinson, Ashley NicoleActivation of monoaminergic receptors is essential to the mechanism by which psychostimulants and antidepressants induce changes in behavior. Although these drugs rapidly increase monoaminergic transmission, they need to be administered for several weeks or months in order to produce long-lasting alterations in behavior. This observation suggests that it is likely that molecular mechanisms downstream of receptor activation contribute to the effects of psychostimulants and antidepressants on behavior.
Recently, we and others have demonstrated that the methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 (MeCP2) contributes to both neural and behavioral adaptations induced by repeated psychostimulant exposure (Deng et al, 2010, Im et al, 2010). Psychostimulants induce rapid and robust phosphorylation of MeCP2 at Ser421 (pMeCP2), a site that is thought to modulate MeCP2-dependent chromatin regulation (Cohen et al, 2011), and this phosphorylation event is selectively induced in the GABAergic interneurons of the nucleus accumbens (NAc). In order to understand the signaling pathways that contribute to the pattern of pMeCP2 we observe, I characterized the monoaminergic signaling pathways that regulate pMeCP2. I found that activation of dopamine (DA) and serotonin (5-HT) transmission is sufficient to induce pMeCP2. The novel finding that drugs that activate serotonergic signaling induce pMeCP2 suggests that pMeCP2 may be involved in serotonergic mediated behaviors.
To determine the requirement of pMeCP2 in serotonergic mediated behaviors, I utilized mice that bear a knockin (KI) mutation that converts serine to alanine at 421 (S421A) (Cohen et al, 2011). After characterizing the behavioral phenotype of these mice, I conducted tests to assess anxiety- and depression-like behavior. I found that the KI mice do not display heightened anxiety in several assays. However, the KI mice exhibit depression-like behavior in the forced swim and tail suspension but show no differences compared to wild-type (WT) littermates in the sucrose preference test, suggesting that pMeCP2 may be implicated in the behavioral response to stressful stimuli.
Because we are interested in examining the role of pMeCP2 in the behavioral adaptations to chronic monoaminergic signaling, I then put the KI mice and their WT littermates through chronic social defeat stress, a behavioral paradigm in which repeated exposure to aggressive mice causes social avoidance that is reversed by chronic but not acute antidepressant treatment. Although the WT mice show an increase in social interaction following chronic imipramine treatment, the KI mice fail to show a behavioral response to chronic treatment. These data suggest that pMeCP2 may be implicated in the antidepressant action of chronic imipramine. Finally, investigation of the brain regions in which pMeCP2 may be contributing to the behavioral response to chronic imipramine treatment revealed that chronic but not acute imipramine treatment induces pMeCP2 in the lateral habenula (LHb), a brain region involved in the behavioral response to stress and reward. Together, these data implicate a novel role for pMeCP2 in depression-like behavior and the behavioral response to chronic antidepressant treatment.
Item Open Access Single-Cell Transcriptome Analysis of Olfactory Sensory Neurons(2016) Chien, MingShanOlfactory sensory neurons (OSNs), which detect a myriad of odorants, are known to express one allele of one olfactory receptor (OR) gene (Olfr) from the largest gene family in the mammalian genome. The OSNs expressing the same OR project their axons to the main olfactory bulb where they converge to form glomeruli. This “One neuron-one receptor rule” makes the olfactory epithelium (OE), which consists of a vast number of OSNs expressing unique ORs, one of the most heterogeneous cell populations. However, the mechanism of how the single OR allele is chosen remains unclear along with the question of whether one OSN only expresses a single OR gene, a hypothesis that has not been rigorously verified while we performed the experiments. Moreover, failure of axonal targeting to single glomerulus was observed in MeCP2 deficient OSNs where delayed development was proposed as an explanation for the phenotype. How Mecp2 mutation caused this aberrant targeting is not entirely understood.
In this dissertation, we explored the transcriptomes of single and mature OSNs by single-cell RNA-Seq to reveal their heterogeneity and further studied the OR gene expression from these isolated OSNs. The singularity of sequenced OSNs was ensured by the observation of monoallelic expression of X-linked genes from the hybrid samples from crosses between mice of different strains where strain-specific polymorphisms could be used to track the allelic origins of SNP-containing reads. The clustering of expression profiles from triplicates that originated from the same cell assured that the transcriptomic identities of OSNs were maintained through the experimental process. The average gene expression profiles of sequenced OSNs correlated well to the conventional transcriptome data of FACS-sorted Omp-positive cells, and the top-ranked expression of OR was conceded in the single-OSN transcriptomes. While exploring cellular diversity, in addition to OR genes, we revealed nearly 200 differentially expressed genes among the sequenced OSNs in this study. Among the 36 sequenced OSNs, eight cells (22.2%) showed multiple OR gene expression and the presences of additional ORs were not restricted to the neighbor loci that shared the transcriptional effect of the primary OR expression, suggesting that the “One neuron-one receptor rule” might not be strictly true at the transcription level. All of the inferable ORs, including additional co-expressed ORs, were shown to be monoallelic. Our sequencing of 21 Mecp2308 mutant OSNs, of which 62% expressed more than one OR genes, and the expression levels of the additional ORs were significantly higher than those in the wild-type, suggested that MeCP2 plays a role in the regulation of singular OR gene expression. Dual label in situ hybridization along with the sequence data revealed that dorsal and ventral ORs were co-expressed in the same Mecp2 mutant OSN, further implying that MeCP2 might be involved in regulation of OR territories in the OE. Our results suggested a new role of MeCP2 in OR gene choice and ratified that this multiple-OR expression caused by Mecp2 mutation did not accompany delayed OSN development that has been observed in the previous studies on the Mecp2 mutants.