| Literature DB >> 34339164 |
Wladimir A Corrales1, Juan P Silva1, Claudio S Parra1, Felipe A Olave1, Felipe I Aguayo1, Luciano Román-Albasini1, Esteban Aliaga2, Leslye Venegas-Zamora1, Ana M Avalos3, Paulina S Rojas4, Vinicius Maracaja-Coutinho5, Robert H Oakley6, John A Cidlowski6, Jenny L Fiedler1.
Abstract
We explored sex-biased effects of the primary stress glucocorticoid hormone corticosterone on the miRNA expression profile in the rat hippocampus. Adult adrenalectomized (ADX) female and male rats received a single corticosterone (10 mg/kg) or vehicle injection, and after 6 h, hippocampi were collected for miRNA, mRNA, and Western blot analyses. miRNA profiling microarrays showed a basal sex-biased miRNA profile in ADX rat hippocampi. Additionally, acute corticosterone administration triggered a sex-biased differential expression of miRNAs derived from genes located in several chromosomes and clusters on the X and 6 chromosomes. Putative promoter analysis unveiled that most corticosterone-responsive miRNA genes contained motifs for either direct or indirect glucocorticoid actions in both sexes. The evaluation of transcription factors indicated that almost 50% of miRNA genes sensitive to corticosterone in both sexes was under glucocorticoid receptor regulation. Transcription factor-miRNA regulatory network analyses identified several transcription factors that regulate, activate, or repress miRNA expression. Validated target mRNA analysis of corticosterone-responsive miRNAs showed a more complex miRNA-mRNA interaction network in males compared to females. Enrichment analysis revealed that several hippocampal-relevant pathways were affected in both sexes, such as neurogenesis and neurotrophin signaling. The evaluation of selected miRNA targets from these pathways displayed a strong sex difference in the hippocampus of ADX-vehicle rats. Corticosterone treatment did not change the levels of the miRNA targets and their corresponding tested proteins. Our data indicate that corticosterone exerts a sex-biased effect on hippocampal miRNA expression, which may engage in sculpting the basal sex differences observed at higher levels of hippocampal functioning.Entities:
Keywords: Adrenalectomy; corticosterone; glucocorticoid receptors; hippocampus; miRNAs; sex bias
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34339164 PMCID: PMC9575153 DOI: 10.1021/acschemneuro.0c00762
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Chem Neurosci ISSN: 1948-7193 Impact factor: 5.780