| Literature DB >> 31350592 |
Nicola Lopizzo1, Valentina Zonca1,2, Nadia Cattane1, Carmine Maria Pariante2, Annamaria Cattaneo3,4.
Abstract
The exposure to stressful experiences during the prenatal period and through the first years of life is known to affect the brain developmental trajectories, leading to an enhanced vulnerability for the development of several psychiatric disorders later in life. However, not all the subjects exposed to the same stressful experience develop a pathologic condition, as some of them, activating coping strategies, become more resilient. The disclosure of mechanisms associated with stress vulnerability or resilience may allow the identification of novel biological processes and potential molecules that, if properly targeted, may prevent susceptibility or potentiate resilience. Over the last years, miRNAs have been proposed as one of the epigenetic mechanisms mediating the long-lasting effects of stress. Accordingly, they are associated with the development of stress vulnerability or resilience-related strategies. Moreover, miRNAs have been proposed as possible biomarkers able to identify subjects at high risk to develop depression and to predict the response to pharmacological treatments. In this review, we aimed to provide an overview of findings from studies in rodents and humans focused on the involvement of miRNAs in the mechanisms of stress response with the final goal to identify distinct sets of miRNAs involved in stress vulnerability or resilience. In addition, we reviewed studies on alterations of miRNAs in the context of depression, showing data on the involvement of miRNAs in the pathogenesis of the disease and in the efficacy of pharmacological treatments, discussing the potential utility of miRNAs as peripheral biomarkers able to predict the treatment response.Entities:
Keywords: Antidepressant response; Depression; Preventive strategies; Stress resilience; Stress vulnerability; miRNAs
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31350592 PMCID: PMC6746676 DOI: 10.1007/s00702-019-02048-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neural Transm (Vienna) ISSN: 0300-9564 Impact factor: 3.575
Summary of the studies showing alterations in miRNAs levels in depressed patients or in control subjects exposed to stress
| microRNA/Gene | Methods | Principal findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| miR-449a, miR-34c | Microarray analysis and real-time PCR | miR-34/449 dysregulation in sperm of subjects exposed to trauma | Dickson et al. ( |
| miR-124-3p | qPCR-based transcript quantification | Significant increase in the expression of miR-124-3p in post-mortem brains of depressed patients versus control subjects | Roy et al. ( |
| miR-218, DCC | Real-time PCR and DCC immunofluorescence | miR-218 as associated with susceptibility to stress-related disorders | Torres-Berrio et al. ( |
| miR-15a | Real-time PCR and NGS sequencing (MiSeq) | Increased levels of miR-15a in blood of subjects exposed to childhood trauma or to the oral administration of Dexamethasone | Volk et al. ( |
| Let-7b, let-7c | Real-time quantitative reverse-transcription PCR | Decreased Let-7b and let-7c baseline expression levels in treatment-resistant depressed patients as compared to controls | Gururajan et al. ( |
| DICER1 | Genome-wide differential gene expression profiles | Role of DICER1 in the mechanisms underlying PTSD and Depression | Wingo et al. ( |
| miR-511, GDNF | Quantitative real-time PCR, miRNA transfections, immunoblotting and immunochemistry | miRNA targeting isoform-specific GFRα1 receptor in shaping neuronal responses to the neurotrophin GDNF | Maheu et al. ( |
| miR-144-5p | Real-time PCR | Reduced plasma miR-144-5p levels in depressed patients as compared to controls | Wang et al. ( |
| miR-16 | Real-time quantitative reverse-transcription PCR | Decreased CSF miR-16 levels in drug-free depressed patients compared to control subjects | Song et al. ( |
| Let-7 family | Polymerase chain reaction–restriction fragment length polymorphism and DNA sequencing assays | Association between rs10877887 and rs13293512 polymorphisms within let-7 family and an increase risk for depression | Liang et al. ( |
| DICER1 | Genome-wide β-catenin enrichment mapping | β-catenin protective role through miRNA production | Dias et al. ( |
| miR-135a | Western blot and real-time PCR | Reduced blood miR135a levels in depressed patients versus controls | Issler et al. ( |
| miR-26b, miR-1972, miR-4485, miR-4498, miR-4743 | Real-time quantitative reverse-transcription PCR | Up-regulated levels of 5 miRNAs in depressed patients compared to healthy controls | Fan et al. ( |
| miR-132, miR-182 | Real-time PCR, ELISA | Role of miR-132 and miR-182 in BDNF regulation | Li et al. ( |
| DGCR8, AGO1 and GEMIN4 | High-resolution melting and Real-Time PCR | DGCR8 rs3757 and AGO1 rs636832 as associated with an increased risk for depression | He et al. ( |
| Panel of 21 miRNAs | Real-time quantitative reverse-transcription PCR | Down-regulation in miRNA expression in depressed suicide subjects versus control subjects | Smalheiser et al. ( |
List of studies reporting miRNAs modulated by stress exposure
| miRNAs modulated by stress exposure | ||
|---|---|---|
| miRNA | Stressful paradigm | References |
| miR-134 | Chronic unpredictable mild stress | Yu et al. ( |
miR-9-5p miR-128-1-5p miR-382-5p miR-16-5p miR-129-5p miR-219a-5p | Chronic mild stress | Buran et al. ( |
miR-135a miR-16 | Inescapable stress | Liu et al. ( |
| miR-17-92 | Jin et al. ( | |
| Several known miRNAs | Chronic unpredictable mild stress | Ma et al. ( |
miR-383 miR-764 | Chronic unpredictable mild stress | Duan et al. ( |
| 16 miRNAs | Electro-acupuncture | Duan et al. ( |
| miR-326 | Chronic variable mild stress | Aschrafi et al. ( |
| miR-10B | Chronic unpredictable stress Sleep deprivation | Jiang and Zhu ( |
| miR-124 | Chronic social defeat Chronic unpredictable mild stress | Bahi et al. ( Cao et al. ( |
| miR-16 | Maternal deprivation and unpredictable stress | Bai et al. ( |
| miR-34c | Acute restraint stress and chronic social defeat stress | Haramati et al. ( |
List of studies reporting involvement of miRNAs in the mechanisms associated with resilience and/or vulnerability to stress
| miRNAs involved in stress resilience and vulnerability | ||
|---|---|---|
| miRNA | Stressful paradigm | References |
miR-455-3p miR-30e-3p | Chronic social defeat | Pearson-Leary et al. ( |
| miR-124 | Chronic unpredictable mild stress Chronic ultra-mild stress | Xu et al. ( Higuchi et al. ( |
| miR-16 | Chronic mild stress | Zurawek et al. ( |
miR-24-2-5p miR-27a-3p miR-30e-5p miR-362-3p miR-139-5p miR-28-3p miR-326-3p miR-99b-5p | Chronic social defeat | Chen et al. ( |
miR-9 miR-326 | Maternal deprivation Chronic unpredictable stress | Zhang et al. ( |
| miR-504 | Maternal deprivation | Zhang et al. ( |
Summary of miRNAs modulated by antidepressant drugs in human samples
| miRNAs | Samples/tissue | Antidepressant drug | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
miR-16 miR-30 miR-34 miR-128 miR-132 miR-134 miR-182 miR-183 miR-185 miR-212 | Serum | Different SSRI and SNRI (4 weeks of treatment) | In patients treated with SSRI, miR-16, miR-183, and miR-212 levels increased significantly after 4 weeks of antidepressant treatment | Lin et al. ( |
miR-451a miR-34a-5p miR-221-3p | Serum | Paroxetine (8 weeks of treatment) | Depressed patients had lower serum miRNA-451a, and higher serum miRNA-34a-5p and miRNA-221-3p as compared to controls; miRNA-34a-5p and miRNA-221-3p decreased, whereas miRNA-451a increased after paroxetine treatment | Kuang et al. ( |
miR-151a-3p miR-221/222 | In silico study | SSRI (paroxetine) | miR-151a-3p, miR-221/222, and their respective target genes, CHL1 and ITGB3, are implicated in the response to SSRI | Oved et al. ( |
miR-130b miR-26a/26b let-7f miR-770-5p miR-34c-5p | Human U87 glioblastoma cells | Escitalopram (24, 48, 72 h) | Significant increase in let-7f, after both 48 h and 72 h and of miR-26a after 48 h of treatment | Maffioletti et al. ( |
miR-146a-5p miR-146b-5p miR-425-3p miR-24-3p | Blood cells | Duloxetine (8 weeks of treatment) | Differential expression of miR-146a-5p, miR-146b-5p, miR-425-3p, and miR-24-3p according to treatment response | Lopez et al. ( |
miR-1202 miR-135a miR-16 | Blood cells | Escitalopram or Desvenlafaxine or Duloxetine (8 weeks of treatment) | In two different cohorts, responders displayed lower baseline miR-1202 levels compared with non-responders; miR-1202 levels increased after 8 weeks of antidepressant treatment | Fiori et al. ( |
| miR-1202 | Blood cells | Desvenlafaxine (8 weeks of treatment) | Changes in peripheral miR-1202 levels were associated with changes in brain regions associated with depression and antidepressant response | Lopez et al. ( |
miR-572 miR-663a | Neuroblastoma cell lines | Fluoxetine (24 h) | Fluoxetine increased the expression of both miR-572 and miR-663a | Mundalil Vasu et al. ( |
| 414 miRNAs | Blood cells and PBMC | Citalopram (8 weeks of treatment) | 414 miRNAs modulated highly correlated set of genes (modules) which are associated with clinical improvements. | Belzeaux et al. ( |
| 222 miRNAs | RNA from plasma | Escitalopram (12 weeks of treatment) | Of 222 miRNAs, 40 miRNAs were differently expressed after treatment; 23 significantly over-expressed and 17 down-regulated | Enatescu et al. ( |
| miR-124 | PBMC | Different antidepressant drugs (8 weeks of treatment) | The expression level of miR-124 was significantly down-regulated after antidepressant drug treatment | He et al. ( |
| miR-355 | Blood cells | Citalopram (4 weeks of treatment) | Citalopram up-regulated miR-335 expression and down-regulated GRM4 mRNA levels | Li et al. ( |
| miR-135 | Blood cells | Escitalopram (12 weeks of treatment) | Trend for higher expression after CBT vs escitalopram | Issler et al. ( |
| miR-1202 | Human Neural Progenitor cells (NPCs) and blood cells | Citalopram or Imipramine (24 h or 15 days for NPCs; 8 weeks of treatment for depressed subjects) | MiR-1202 was up-regulated in NPCs after acute treatment with both citalopram and imipramine. Moreover, remitter depressed patients showed an up-regulation of miR-1202 after citalopram treatment | Lopez et al. ( |
miR-221 miR-222 | Human Lymphoblastoid cell lines | Paroxetine (21 days of treatment) | Decreased expression of miR-221 and miR-222 after paroxetine treatment | Oved et al. ( |
| 30 miRNAs | Blood cells | Escitalopram (12 weeks of treatment) | Identification of 30 miRNAs modulated by antidepressant treatment: 28 miRNAs were up-regulated, and 2 miRNAs were down-regulated | Bocchio-Chiavetto et al. ( |
| 42 miRNAs | Human Lymphoblastoid cell lines | Paroxetine (3 days of treatment) | Of the 42 miRNAs, 19 had higher expression levels in the LCLs with high sensitivity to paroxetine | Oved et al. ( |
miR-145 miR-20b | PBMC | Different antidepressant drugs (8 weeks of treatment) | Increased miRNAs levels during treatment only in responder patients | Belzeaux et al. ( |
Summary of miRNAs modulated by antidepressant drugs in animal models
| miRNAs | Samples/tissue | Antidepressant drug | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-134 | Basolateral amygdala (rat) | Ginsenoside Rg1 (5 weeks of treatment) | Ginsenoside Rg1 induced an up-regulation of miR-134 in basolateral amygdala of rats exposed to chronic unpredictable mild stress | Yu et al. ( |
| 626 miRNAs | Hippocampus (mice) | Paroxetine (2 weeks of treatment) | 64 miRNAs showed significant changes after drug exposure | Miao et al. ( |
miR-448-3p miR-764-5p miR-1264-3p miR-1298-5p miR-1912-3p | Hippocampus (mice) | Ketamine (single infusion) | Treatment with ketamine significantly increased the levels of miR-448-3p, miR-764-5p, miR-1264-3p, miR-1298-5p, and miR-1912-3p after 24 h | Grieco et al. ( |
| miR-124 | Hippocampus (mice) | Imipramine (continuous infusion for 2 or 4 weeks) | Imipramine reversed the effects on the down-regulation on miR-124 induced by chronic unpredictable mild stress | Higuchi et al. ( |
miR-132 miR-18a miR-134 miR-124a | Frontal lobe and hippocampus (mice) | Duloxetine (3 weeks of treatment) | MiR-132 and miR-18a were up-regulated, whereas miR-134 and miR-124a were down-regulated after duloxetine administration in the hippocampus. In the frontal lobe, duloxetine induced the up-regulation of miR-18a compared to control animals | Pan and Liu ( |
miR-9 miR-326 | Brain tissue (rat) | Escitalopram (4 weeks of treatment) | Escitalopram did not change the expression of miR-9, whereas the aberrant levels of miR-326 were normalized by the antidepressant drug | Zhang et al. ( |
| miR-135 | Raphe Nuclei (mice) | Imipramine or Fluoxetine or Reboxetine (24 h-acute; from 18 to 21 days of treatment-chronic) | Chronic and acute treatment with imipramine or fluoxetine was able to up-regulate miR-135 in raphe nuclei | Issler et al. ( |
| miR-132 | Hippocampus (male mice) | Oleanolic acid (3 weeks of treatment) | Oleanolic acid induced the up-regulation of miR-132 | Yi et al. ( |
| 15 miRNAs | Hippocampus (mice) | 7-Chlorokynurenic acid (7-CTKA) (intraperitoneal injection) | 7-CTKA exerted a rapid antidepressant effect by modulating 15 hippocampal miRNAs involved in the TrkB-ERK/Akt pathways | Liu et al. ( |
| miR-206 | Hippocampus (rat) | Ketamine (3 days of treatment) | MiR-206 was down-regulated after ketamine administration compared to control animals | Yang et al. |
miR-125 miR-182 | Hippocampus (rat) | Chaihu Shugan San | MiR-125 and miR-182 recovered to normal levels after intervention with Chaihu Shugan San | Cao et al. ( |
| miR-1971 | Prefrontal cortices (PFCs) | Fluoxetine (28 days of treatment) | Fluoxetine in shocked mice was associated with a significant reduction in miR-1971 expression | Schmidt et al. ( |
| miR-212 | Dentate gyrus and whole blood (rat) | Electroconvulsive stimulation (ECS) (from one-acute to ten-chronic stimulations) | MiRNA miR-212 were significantly increased in rat dentate gyrus following both acute and chronic ECS. MiR-212 levels increased in whole blood only after chronic ECS | Ryan et al. ( |
| miR-598-5p | Hippocampus (rat) | Electroconvulsive Shock Therapy (10 days), Ketamine (single dose) and Fluoxetine (21 days of treatment) | Electroconvulsive shock therapy and ketamine modulated the expression of miR-598-5p in stressed animals | O’Connor et al. ( |
| miR-16 | Hippocampus (mouse) | Fluoxetine (3 days of treatment) | Fluoxetine reduced miR-16 expression in the hippocampus | Launay et al. ( |
| miR-16 | Raphe nuclei (mouse) | Fluoxetine (3 days of treatment) | Fluoxetine increased miR-16 levels in serotonergic raphe nuclei | Baudry et al. ( |