| Literature DB >> 28335457 |
Marija Kundakovic1, Ivana Jaric2.
Abstract
Prenatal adverse environments, such as maternal stress, toxicological exposures, and viral infections, can disrupt normal brain development and contribute to neurodevelopmental disorders, including schizophrenia, depression, and autism. Increasing evidence shows that these short- and long-term effects of prenatal exposures on brain structure and function are mediated by epigenetic mechanisms. Animal studies demonstrate that prenatal exposure to stress, toxins, viral mimetics, and drugs induces lasting epigenetic changes in the brain, including genes encoding glucocorticoid receptor (Nr3c1) and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (Bdnf). These epigenetic changes have been linked to changes in brain gene expression, stress reactivity, and behavior, and often times, these effects are shown to be dependent on the gestational window of exposure, sex, and exposure level. Although evidence from human studies is more limited, gestational exposure to environmental risks in humans is associated with epigenetic changes in peripheral tissues, and future studies are required to understand whether we can use peripheral biomarkers to predict neurobehavioral outcomes. An extensive research effort combining well-designed human and animal studies, with comprehensive epigenomic analyses of peripheral and brain tissues over time, will be necessary to improve our understanding of the epigenetic basis of neurodevelopmental disorders.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation; depression; developmental programming; early life exposures; epigenetic; neurodevelopmental disorders; prenatal environment; schizophrenia
Year: 2017 PMID: 28335457 PMCID: PMC5368708 DOI: 10.3390/genes8030104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Figure 1The epigenome as a substrate for the lasting effects of prenatal stressors on brain function and behavior. The epigenome is particularly vulnerable to disruption by environmental agents during prenatal development, when an extensive reprogramming and programming of epigenetic modifications takes place. The post-fertilization “epigenetic reprogramming” (zygote to blastocyte stage) includes the almost complete erasure of DNA methylation in both the paternal (blue line) and the maternal (red line) genome, which is then re-established (solid gray line), leading to differential DNA methylation and gene expression patterns in the first cell lineages. In the later stages of development, epigenetic marks are less dynamic (dashed gray line), but still actively participate in gene expression programming, relevant for later stages of cellular differentiation (“epigenetic programming”). As an example, during the differentiation of brain cells (see picture inset), DNA methylation and histone modifications are involved in the gene expression programming that differentiates neuronal stem cells into neuronal and glial progenitors, and further into more specialized neuronal and glial cells (astrocytes and oligodendrocytes). Hence, prenatal exposure to environmental factors that affect the epigenome (stress, infection, toxins) can disrupt gene expression programming in the embryo/fetus, resulting in developmental deficits, including abnormal brain development that can lead to later-life behavioral disorders. Importantly, the epigenome is also dynamic in mature, postmitotic neurons (depicted as a dashed gray line postnatally), so long-term behavioral abnormalities may also result from the improper developmental programming of the brain’s epigenetic machinery that continues to be used by mature neurons.
Animal studies providing an epigenetic link between prenatal environmental exposure and neurobehavioral outcomes.
| Study | Species (Strain) | Stress Paradigm | Offspring Sex and Age | Brain Area | Analysis | Gene (Epigenetic Changes) | Epigenetic Regulators | Neurobehavioral Outcome | Sex Specificity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basil et al., 2014 [ | Mouse (C57BL/6N) | Maternal immune activation (GD17) | Males and females, PD42 | Hy | Sequenom EpiTYPER assay | Mecp2, LINE1 | - | - | Males and females; more profound changes in females |
| DiNieri et al., 2011 [ | Rat (Long Evans) | THC rat model (GD5-PD2) | Males, PD62 | NAc | ChIP (H3K9me2, H3K4me3, RNA polymerase II) | Drd2 | - | Increased sensitivity to opiate reward; Drd2 transcriptional changes | - |
| Dong et al., 2015 [ | Mouse (Swiss albino ND4) | Restrain stress (GD7-GD21) | Males, PD75 | FC, Hy | MeDIP, hMeDIP, ChIP | Bdnf | Dnmt1, Tet1 | Hyperactivity; Impaired social interaction; Bdnf transcriptional changes | - |
| Kaminen-Ahola et al., 2010 [ | Mouse (C57BL/6J Agoutivy) | Ethanol exposure (GD0.5-GD8.5) | Males and females, PD28–30 | FB | Bisulfite Sequencing, Gene Expression Arrays | IAPs | - | Fetal alcohol syndrome-like features | - |
| Kundakovic et al., 2013 [ | Mouse (BALB/c) | BPA exposure (GD0-GD19) | Males and females, PD30–70 | PFC, Hi, Hy | Bisulfite Pyrosequencing | Esr1 | Dnmt1, Dnmt3a | Disrupted exploratory, social and anxiety-like behavior; transcriptional changes in Esr1, Esr2 and Esrrg | Sex specific changes |
| Kundakovic et al., 2015 [ | Mouse (BALB/c) | BPA exposure (GD0-GD19) | Males and females, PD28 and PD60 | Hi | Bisulfite Pyrosequencing | Bdnf IV, Bdnf IX, Grin2b | Dnmt1, Gadd45b | Disrupted exploration of a novel object; Bdnf and Grin2b transcriptional changes | Changes were observed in males |
| Labouesse et al., 2015 [ | Mouse (C57BL/6N) | Maternal immune activation (GD17) | PD80–100 | mPFC | MeDIP, hMeDIP, ChIP (MeCP2) | Gad1, Gad2 | MeCP2 | Impaired working memory and social interaction deficits; Gad1 and Gad2 transcriptional changes | - |
| Mueller and Bale, 2008 [ | Mouse (C57BL/6N:129) | Chronic, variable stress during early, mid and late gestation | Males and females, 6–16 weeks | Hi, Am | Bisulfite Pyrosequencing | Crf, Nr3c1 | - | Maladaptive behavioral stress-responsivity, anhedonia, and an increased sensitivity to SSRI treatment in males | Sex specific changes |
| Matrisciano et al., 2013 [ | Mouse (Swiss albino ND4) | Restrain stress (GD7-GD21) | Males, PD60 | PFC, Hi | MeDIP, hMeDIP, ChIP (Dnmt1, MeCP2) | Reelin, Gad1 | Dnmt 1, Dnmt 3a | Hyperactivity; Impaired social interaction, prepulse inhibition, and fear conditioning; Reelin and Gad1 transcriptional changes | |
| Novikova et al., 2008 [ | Mouse (CD1) | Cocaine exposure (GD8-GD19) | Males, PD3 and PD30 | Hi | Bisulfite sequencing, MeDIP/CGI array | Genome-wide | Dnmt1, Dnmt 3a | Transcriptional changes in Gpr73, Plk2, Prpn5, Mapk1, Impa1, Pyrk3, Gata4, Mtap6, Gtf3c1, Coq7 | - |
| Onishchenko et al., 2008 [ | Mouse (C57BL/6/Bkl) | MeHg exposure (GD7-PD7) | Males, 9 weeks | DG | ChIP (H3ac, H3K27me3), Ms-SNuPE | Bdnf | Depresion like behavior; transcriptional changes in Bdnf | - | |
| Richetto et al., 2017 [ | Mouse (C57BL6/N) | Maternal immune activation (GD9 and GD17) | Males, PD100 | mPFC | SureSelectXT capture sequencing assay and EpiTYPER | Genome wide (Dlx1, Lhx5, Lhx8, Wnt3, Wnt8a, Wnt7b, Efnb3, Mid1, Nlgn1, Nrxn2, Nf2, etc.) | - | Impaired sensorimotor gating, social interaction and spatial memory; transcriptional changes in Dlx1, Wnt3, Mid1, Nlgn1, Nf2 | - |
| Schraut et al., 2014 [ | Mouse (C57BL6/J, 5-Htt +/+ and 5-Htt +/−) | Restrain stress (GD13-GD17) | Females, PD95 | Hi | MeDIP-on-Chip | Genome wide | - | Anxiety-related behavior; Mdb transcriptional changes | - |
| St-Cyr S and McGowan, 2015 [ | Mouse (C57BL/6N) | Exposure to predator odor (GD11-GD18) | Females and males, PD90 | Hi, Am | Bisulfite Pyrosequencing | Bdnf | - | Increased avoidance and decreased predator-odor associated activity; Bdnf and Crhr1 transcriptional changes | Males and females, but females showed a greater increase in CORT level |
| Zheng et al., 2016 [ | Mouse (Kunming) | Restrain stress (GD5-delivery) | Males, PD40 | Hi | MeDIP,ChiP (H3K14ac) | Bdnf | Dnmt1, Hdac1, Hdac2, | Depressive-like and anxiety-like behaviors, Bdnf transcriptional changes | - |
Abbreviation List: GD—gestational day, PD—postnatal day, THC—delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol, BPA—Bisphenol A, MeHg—methylmercury, Hy—hypothalamus, NAc—nucleus accumbens, FC—frontal cortex, FB—forebrain, PFC—prefrontal cortex, mPFC—medial prefrontal cortex, Hi—hippocampus, Am—amygdala, DG—dentate gyrus, ChIP—Chromatin Immunoprecipitation, MeDIP—Methylated DNA immunoprecipitation, hMeDIP—Hydroxymethylated DNA Immunoprecipitation, MeDIP-CGI-arrays—methylated DNA immunoprecipitation coupled with CpG island microarrays, Ms-SNuPE—Methylation-sensitive single-nucleotide primer extension, LINE1—long interspersed element, IAPs—intracisternal A-particles.