Literature DB >> 21275079

MicroRNA expression in rat brain exposed to repeated inescapable shock: differential alterations in learned helplessness vs. non-learned helplessness.

Neil R Smalheiser1, Giovanni Lugli, Hooriyah S Rizavi, Hui Zhang, Vetle I Torvik, Ghanshyam N Pandey, John M Davis, Yogesh Dwivedi.   

Abstract

MicroRNA (miRNA) expression was measured within frontal cortex of male Holtzman rats subjected to repeated inescapable shocks at days 1 and 7, tested for learned helplessness (LH) at days 2 and 8, and sacrificed at day 15. We compared rats that did vs. did not exhibit LH, as well as rats that were placed in the apparatus and tested for avoidance but not given shocks (tested controls, TC). Non-learned helpless (NLH) rats showed a robust adaptive miRNA response to inescapable shock whereas LH rats showed a markedly blunted response. One set of 12 miRNAs showed particularly large, significant down-regulation in NLH rats relative to tested controls (mir-96, 141, 182, 183, 183*, 298, 200a, 200a*, 200b, 200b*, 200c, 429). These were encoded at a few shared polycistronic loci, suggesting that the down-regulation was coordinately controlled at the level of transcription. Most of these miRNAs are enriched in synaptic fractions. Moreover, almost all of these share 5'-seed motifs with other members of the same set, suggesting that they will hit similar or overlapping sets of target mRNAs. Finally, half of this set is predicted to hit Creb1 as a target. We also identified a core miRNA co-expression module consisting of 36 miRNAs that are highly correlated with each other across individuals of the LH group (but not in the NLH or TC groups). Thus, miRNAs participate in the alterations of gene expression networks that underlie the normal (NLH) as well as aberrant (LH) response to repeated shocks.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21275079     DOI: 10.1017/S1461145710001628

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Neuropsychopharmacol        ISSN: 1461-1457            Impact factor:   5.176


  55 in total

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7.  Prenatal stress changes the glycoprotein GPM6A gene expression and induces epigenetic changes in rat offspring brain.

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8.  Identification of MicroRNA-124-3p as a Putative Epigenetic Signature of Major Depressive Disorder.

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Review 9.  MicroRNAs in depression and suicide: Recent insights and future perspectives.

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Journal:  J Affect Disord       Date:  2018-07-24       Impact factor: 4.839

10.  Altered brain network modules induce helplessness in major depressive disorder.

Authors:  Daihui Peng; Feng Shi; Ting Shen; Ziwen Peng; Chen Zhang; Xiaohua Liu; Meihui Qiu; Jun Liu; Kaida Jiang; Yiru Fang; Dinggang Shen
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