| Literature DB >> 23331332 |
Abstract
Women have a higher incidence of stress related disorders including depression and generalized anxiety disorder, and epigenetic mechanisms likely contribute to this sex difference. Evidence from preclinical research suggests that epigenetic mechanisms are responsible for both sexual dimorphism of brain regions and sensitivity of the stress response. Epigenetic modifications such as DNA methylation and histone modifications can occur transgenerationally, developmentally, or in response to environmental stimuli such as stress exposure. This review will provide an overview of the various forms of epigenetic modifications observed in the central nervous system and will explain how these mechanisms contribute to a sexually dimorphic brain. It will also discuss the ways in which epigenetic alterations coincide with, and functionally contribute to, the behavioral response to stress across the lifespan. Ultimately, this review will focus on novel research utilizing animal models to investigate sex differences in epigenetic mechanisms that influence susceptibility to stress. Exploration of this relationship reveals epigenetic mechanisms with the potential to explain sexual dimorphism in the occurrence of stress related disorders.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23331332 PMCID: PMC3586570 DOI: 10.1186/2042-6410-4-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Sex Differ ISSN: 2042-6410 Impact factor: 5.027
Epigenetic modifications associated with stress
| Paternal Stress | Male and female | · Pro-depressant behavior in FST (both sexes) [53] | · Increased basal CORT (males) [53] | · Hypothesized but not examined. |
| | | · Decreased sucrose preference (males) [53] | · Decreased VEGF (males) [53] | |
| | | · Increased anxiety like behavior (both sexes) [53] | | |
| | | · Increased locomotor activity (males) [53] | | |
| | | · Increased social avoidance (males) [53] | | |
| Gestational stress (PND 1-7) | Male and female | · Pro-depressant behavior in TST (males F1 [46] and F2 generation [32]) | · Increased CORT response to stress (males-F1) [46] | · Decreased methylation of CRF promoter region [46] |
| | | · Pro-depressant behavior in FST [46] (males) | · Increased CRF expression in central amygdala [46] | · Increased methylation in GR promoter region [46] |
| | | · Altered navigation strategy for Barnes maze [48] | · Decreased GR in regions of hippocampus [46] | · Dysmasculinzed HDAC expression [32] |
| Early life stress (extended separation) | Male and female | · Pro-depressant behavior in FST [64] | · Increased HPA activity [64] | · Hypomethylation of Avp in hypothalamus. [64] |
| | | · Decreased inhibitory avoidance [64] | · Decreased neurogenesis [67] | · Decreased MeCP2 binding in Avp enhancer [64] |
| | | · Decreased spatial learning [65] | | · Hypermethylation of Avp in hippocampus (males) [70] |
| | | | | · Hypomethylation of NR4a1 in hippocampus (C57BL/6 males) [70] |
| Repeated Social defeat stress | Male | · Social avoidance [47] | · Changes in dendritic spine morphology in NAc [47] | · Dnmt 3a expression increased in NAc [47] |
| | | · Decreased sucrose preference [54] | · Increased CRF expression in PVN of susceptible mice [22] | · Over expression of Dnmt 3a induced pro-depressant behaviors [47] |
| | | · Increased anxiety [54] | · Decreased Bdnf in hippocampus [74] | · Blocking DNA methylation was antidepressant [47] |
| | | · Alterations in metabolic function [54] | | · Decreased methylation of the CRF promoter in PVN [22] |
| | | | | · Increased repressive histone marks on BDNF promoters [74] |
| Sub chronic variable stress | Male and female | · Decreased sucrose preference (females) [56] | · Increased basal CORT (females) [56] | · Dnmt 3a, 3b and Dnmt1 expression increased in NAc [56] |
| | | · Pro-depressant behavior in Splash test (females) [56] | | · Altered in transcription for MBD proteins [56] |
| | | · Decreased latency to eat in a novel environment (females) [56] | | · Transcriptional and behavioral effects blocked by removal of Dnmt 3a (females) [56] |
| · Pro-depressant behavior in FST (females) [56, 57] |