| Literature DB >> 26885402 |
Freddy Jeanneteau1, Margarita Arango-Lievano1.
Abstract
The brain evolved cellular mechanisms for adapting synaptic function to energy supply. This is particularly evident when homeostasis is challenged by stress. Signaling loops between the mitochondria and synapses scale neuronal connectivity with bioenergetics capacity. A biphasic "inverted U shape" response to the stress hormone glucocorticoids is demonstrated in mitochondria and at synapses, modulating neural plasticity and physiological responses. Low dose enhances neurotransmission, synaptic growth, mitochondrial functions, learning, and memory whereas chronic, higher doses produce inhibition of these functions. The range of physiological effects by stress and glucocorticoid depends on the dose, duration, and context at exposure. These criteria are met by neuronal activity and the circadian, stress-sensitive and ultradian, stress-insensitive modes of glucocorticoid secretion. A major hallmark of stress-related neuropsychiatric disorders is the disrupted glucocorticoid rhythms and tissue resistance to signaling with the glucocorticoid receptor (GR). GR resistance could result from the loss of context-dependent glucocorticoid signaling mediated by the downregulation of the activity-dependent neurotrophin BDNF. The coincidence of BDNF and GR signaling changes glucocorticoid signaling output with consequences on mitochondrial respiration efficiency, synaptic plasticity, and adaptive trajectories.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26885402 PMCID: PMC4738951 DOI: 10.1155/2016/3985063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Plast ISSN: 1687-5443 Impact factor: 3.599
Figure 1The mitochondria-synapse signaling loop is modulated by glucocorticoids. Acute and moderate glucocorticoid peaks rapidly promote the formation of new dendritic spines via a membrane GR coupled to the activation of the LIMK1-cofilin pathway. In contrast, glucocorticoid-mediated spine elimination is delayed and requires the transcription of new gene products. GR is present at pre- and postsynaptic membranes, in the cytoplasm, the nucleus, and the mitochondria. The exact mechanisms and series of molecular events are unknown. Trains of electrical stimulation impose an intense energy demand that can result in mitochondrial fragmentation if unmet, thereby increasing the ATP : AMP ratio, the activation of the AMP-sensing kinase to signal the local decrease of energy stores. New mitochondria can be captured in a calcium-dependent manner where energy stores are low. The levels of intracellular calcium determine whether or not to activate the calcium-dependent phosphatase calcineurin, which can be disruptive for the focal adhesion of mitochondria by dephosphorylating cofilin, impacting on the polymerization of the acting cytoskeleton tethering membranes to the mitochondria. Additionally, synaptic pruning can result from NMDAR-dependent LTD, calcium-dependent cytochrome c release whose end product is the activated caspase-3. Caspase-3 exerts local nonapoptotic effects via a broad spectrum of synaptic substrates. To this end, caspase-3 activity is retained at hotspots thanks to transcription of inhibitors of apoptosis proteins (IAP), some of which are GR-regulated genes, and by a constitutive active ubiquitin-proteasome degradation system from which caspase-3 can only be protected within the hotspots. Select transcriptional targets of GR have been involved in the regulation of respiration, mitochondrial uncoupling, and elongation, the dynamics of the actin cytoskeleton and synaptic plasticity.
Figure 2Neurotrophic priming of glucocorticoid signaling. (a) The coincidence of BDNF and glucocorticoid signaling triggers rapid and slow effects different from the sum of genes regulated by individual pathways. Pathway-1: glucocorticoids impact the expression of GR-regulated genes. Pathway-2: BDNF-induced GR phosphorylation could foster the recruitment of cofactors that change transcriptional output. Pathway-3: BDNF/TrkB-responding genes plus epigenetic priming at locus previously unexposed to the activated GR. (b) In the center are listed the most represented genomic DNA ligands bound to GR upon stimulation of cortical neurons with BDNF and dexamethasone. The interplay of BDNF and glucocorticoid signaling uses the mechanisms of epigenetic priming as well as GR phosphorylation to specify the range of targets. Image adapted from [124].
Summary of the cellular and physiological effects of BDNF, glucocorticoids, stress, major depressive disorders, and antidepressant therapies.
| BDNF | Glucocorticoids | Stress | Major depression | Antidepressant therapies | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Synaptic structure | Formation, maintenance | Formation, elimination, and maintenance#¶ | Formation, elimination#¶ | Elimination¶ | Formation, maintenance#¶ |
| Synaptic function | Potentiation | Potentiation, depression#¶ | Potentiation, depression#¶ | Depression¶ | Potentiation#¶ |
| Mitochondria structure |
Biogenesis | Augmented/diminished# | Augmented/diminished# | Diminished¶ | Augmented/diminished# |
| Mitochondria energetics function | Augmented ¶ | Augmented/diminished# | Augmented/diminished# | Diminished¶ | Augmented/diminished# |
| Mitochondria redox function | Augmented¶ | Augmented/diminished# | Augmented/diminished# | Diminished¶ | Augmented# |
| Learning and memory | Augmented¶ | Augmented/diminished# | Augmented/diminished# | Diminished | Augmented# |
| Despair and anxiety | Diminished¶ | Augmented/diminished# | Augmented/diminished# | Augmented | Diminished# |
#: effect depends on the dose, duration, and context at exposure.
¶: effect is specific of the brain region.
∗: effect demonstrated in cultured cells.