Literature DB >> 33172347

Perinatal protein malnutrition results in genome-wide disruptions of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine at regions that can be restored to control levels by an enriched environment.

Carolina D Alberca1, Ligia A Papale2, Andy Madrid2,3, Octavio Gianatiempo1,4, Eduardo T Cánepa1,4, Reid S Alisch2, Mariela Chertoff1,4.   

Abstract

Maternal malnutrition remains one of the major adversities affecting brain development and long-term mental health outcomes, increasing the risk to develop anxiety and depressive disorders. We have previously shown that malnutrition-induced anxiety-like behaviours can be rescued by a social and sensory stimulation (enriched environment) in male mice. Here, we expand these findings to adult female mice and profiled genome-wide ventral hippocampal 5hmC levels related to malnutrition-induced anxiety-like behaviours and their rescue by an enriched environment. This approach revealed 508 differentially hydroxymethylated genes associated with protein malnutrition and that several genes (N = 34) exhibited a restored 5hmC abundance to control levels following exposure to an enriched environment, including genes involved in neuronal functions like dendrite outgrowth, axon guidance, and maintenance of neuronal circuits (e.g. Fltr3, Itsn1, Lman1, Lsamp, Nav, and Ror1) and epigenetic mechanisms (e.g. Hdac9 and Dicer1). Sequence motif predictions indicated that 5hmC may be modulating the binding of transcription factors for several of these transcripts, suggesting a regulatory role for 5hmC in response to perinatal malnutrition and exposure to an enriched environment. Together, these findings establish a role for 5hmC in early-life malnutrition and reveal genes linked to malnutrition-induced anxious behaviours that are mitigated by an enriched environment.

Entities:  

Keywords:  5-hydroxymethylcytosine; anxiety; enriched Environment; epigenetics; neuronal Development; perinatal Malnutrition; ventral Hippocampus

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33172347      PMCID: PMC8510594          DOI: 10.1080/15592294.2020.1841871

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Epigenetics        ISSN: 1559-2294            Impact factor:   4.528


  74 in total

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Journal:  Epigenetics       Date:  2017-01-27       Impact factor: 4.528

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