| Literature DB >> 24646280 |
Nigel Whittle1, Nicolas Singewald1.
Abstract
A novel strategy to treat anxiety and fear-related disorders such as phobias, panic and PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) is combining CBT (cognitive behavioural therapy), including extinction-based exposure therapy, with cognitive enhancers. By targeting and boosting mechanisms underlying learning, drug development in this field aims at designing CBT-augmenting compounds that help to overcome extinction learning deficits, promote long-term fear inhibition and thus support relapse prevention. Progress in revealing the role of epigenetic regulation of specific genes associated with extinction memory generation has opened new avenues in this direction. The present review examines recent evidence from pre-clinical studies showing that increasing histone acetylation, either via genetic or pharmacological inhibition of HDACs (histone deacetylases) by e.g. vorinostat/SAHA (suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid), entinostat/MS-275, sodium butyrate, TSA (trichostatin A) or VPA (valproic acid), or by targeting HATs (histone acetyltransferases), augments fear extinction and, importantly, generates a long-term extinction memory that can protect from return of fear phenomena. The molecular mechanisms and pathways involved including BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor) and NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) receptor signalling are just beginning to be revealed. First studies in healthy humans are in support of extinction-facilitating effects of HDAC inhibitors. Very recent evidence that HDAC inhibitors can rescue deficits in extinction-memory-impaired rodents indicates a potential clinical utility of this approach also for exposure therapy-resistant patients. Important future work includes investigation of the long-term safety aspects of HDAC inhibitor treatment, as well as design of isotype(s)-specific inhibitors. Taken together, HDAC inhibitors display promising potential as pharmacological adjuncts to augment the efficacy of exposure-based approaches in anxiety and trauma therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24646280 PMCID: PMC3961057 DOI: 10.1042/BST20130233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Soc Trans ISSN: 0300-5127 Impact factor: 5.407
Figure 1Histone acetylation: a mechanism regulating gene expression
Acetylation of histone proteins is catalysed by the action of HATs and is reversed by the action of HDACs. Acetylation can promote gene transcription by (among other mechanisms) causing direct structural changes to chromatin to result in a more relaxed state. This relaxed chromatin state can expose strands of DNA to transcriptional machinery, which is composed of immediate-early genes (IEG, e.g. Zif268, c-Fos) and DNA polymerases (e.g. Pol II), which then can initiate gene transcription. Inset: the core unit of chromatin is the nucleosome. This is an octamer of two molecules of each core histone H2A, H2B, H3 and H4, wrapped around 147 bp of DNA [36]. Ac, acetylated lysine residues on histone tail proteins.
Figure 2Brain regions displaying enhanced histone acetylation following fear extinction and fear learning
Published studies have revealed that successful fear extinction (A) and fear conditioning (B) is associated with increases in histone H3 and H4 acetylation in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), hippocampus and amygdala (fear conditioning only; there is no published study concerning fear extinction). Differential epigenetic regulation of BDNF is observed between fear extinction and fear conditioning in the mPFC: extinction-induced increases in histone H4 acetylation are in the promoter region IV of BDNF, whereas fear conditioning increases histone H3 acetylation in promoters of BDNF. This differential histone acetylation in BDNF promoters between fear extinction and fear conditioning may be of significance as acetylated (ac) H3 and H4 are thought to subserve different functions [44]. The rodent Bdnf gene contains at least nine 5′ non-coding exons, each with its own promoter, and a common coding exon (C). Transcription of BDNF transcripts containing exon I or IV has been shown to respond differentially to divergent stimuli; the pan-HDAC inhibitor VPA [82] or NMDA receptor activation predominately increases exon IV-specific mRNA transcripts, whereas L-type voltage-dependent Ca2+ signals seem to mostly increase exon I-specific mRNA transcripts [102]. The neuronal localization of exon I-containing BDNF transcripts is predominately in the soma, whereas that of exon IV-containing BDNF transcripts is in proximal dendrites and in the soma [103]. The targeting of mRNA to specific subcellular compartments, particularly in dendrites is an important feature linked to synaptic plasticity. Thus fear extinction-induced increases in BDNF exon IV transcripts in dendrites [which may be potentiated with HDAC inhibitors (Box 1)] may be a significant mechanism underlying successful fear extinction.
Studies showing that HDAC inhibitors augment exposure-based fear extinction and rescue extinction learning deficits
Partial extinction: reduction of fear during the extinction training session was not to pre-conditioning levels; complete extinction: reduction of fear was to pre-conditioning levels. CaMKII, Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II; ND, not determined; NS, not stated in reference.
| Compound/manipulation | HDAC selectivity | Fear reduction during extinction training | Administration of HDAC inhibitor | Histone acetylation | Behaviour | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Extinguishing rodents | ||||||
| Genetic knockout | HDAC2 in forebrain CaMKII neurons | Partial | ND | Increased contextual and cued extinction | [ | |
| Vorinostat/SAHA | Class I (HDAC1, HDAC2 and HDAC3); class II (HDAC6) | Complete | Immediately following fear extinction training | Increased hippocampal H3 (assessed 2 h following SAHA administration) | Increased contextual extinction | [ |
| TSA (trichostatin A) | Pan class I and class II | Partial | Immediately before extinction training (systemic and intra-hippocampal) | ND | Increased contextual extinction | [ |
| Sodium butyrate | Class I (HDAC1 and HDAC2); class II (HDAC7) | Complete | 15 min before extinction training (systemic and intra-hippocampal) | Increased infralimbic H3K14 (assessed 30 min following extinction training) | Increased cued extinction and protection against spontaneous return of fear | [ |
| NS | Immediately following extinction training | Increased cued extinction | [ | |||
| Partial | ND | Increased cued extinction | [ | |||
| VPA | Class I (HDAC1, HDAC2 and HDAC3) | Complete and partial | 2 h before extinction training | Increased prefrontal cortex H4K5/K8/K12/K16 in | Increased cued extinction | [ |
| Complete and partial | 2 h before extinction training | ND | Increased cued extinction; decreased freezing to the conditioning context (renewal) | [ | ||
| S1 mice (deficient fear extinction) | ||||||
| MS-275 (entinostat) | Class I (HDAC1) | Deficient | 2 h before extinction training | ND | No fear reduction | [ |
| Complete | Immediately following extinction training | ND | Increased cued extinction | [ | ||
| VPA | Class I (HDAC 1, HDAC2 and HDAC3) | VPA induced complete extinction | 2 h before extinction training | ND | Increased cued extinction | [ |
| Dietary zinc restriction (ZnR) | Zn2+ required for HDAC activity | ZnR induced complete extinction | ND | Increased cued extinction | [ | |
| SPS (deficient fear extinction) | ||||||
| SAHA (vorinostat) | Class I (HDAC1, HDAC2 and HDAC3); class II (HDAC6) | NS | Immediately following extinction training | Increased H3K14; increased H4K5/K8/K12/K16 (assessed 2 h following SAHA administration) | Increased contextual extinction | [ |
*Data obtained from assessing HDAC isoform selectivity using purified recombinant human isoforms [65].
†Data obtained from assessing HDAC isoform selectivity using a chemoproteomic approach [66].
‡Data obtained from assessing HDAC isoform selectivity in haemopoietic cell lines [101].
§Complete fear extinction without the administration of any pharmacological intervention was observed following ‘weak’ fear conditioning. Deficient extinction retrieval was observed revealing extinction consolidation deficits in S1 mice.
Figure 3HDAC inhibitors augment fear extinction and rescue cognitive deficits in animal models of impaired extinction
(A) Normal extinguishing rodents display fear reduction during a exposure-based fear extinction training session (termed ‘extinction acquisition’; black broken line) and extinction-induced increases in histone acetylation (black filled circle) during extinction memory consolidation. Evidence of successful fear extinction consolidation is observed with low fear levels during a retrieval test 24 h later (short-term extinction retrieval; black filled circle). However, long-term fear inhibition is lacking as return of fear can be observed. Weak conditioned S1 (wS1) mice and SPS rats display intact extinction acquisition (red broken line), but are unable to consolidate/retrieve this memory (red filled circle), probably due to insufficient increases in extinction-induced histone acetylation and subsequent gene expression changes. Post-extinction training administration of HDAC inhibitors (MS-275, SAHA; green arrow) in wS1 and SPS rats can induce histone acetylation with subsequent rescue of extinction-consolidation deficits and promotion of long-term fear inhibition (green filled circles). (B) Normal conditioned S1 display in addition also impaired extinction acquisition (red broken line). Pharmaceutical adjuncts such as VPA (green arrow) that induce extinction acquisition (positive training effect, i.e. fear reduction), as well as HDAC inhibition, are required to rescue the pronounced extinction deficits and promote long-term fear inhibition (green filled circles) in these mice. Abbreviations: Ac, acetylated histone; HDACi, HDAC inhibitors.