Histone H3 serotonylation dynamics in dorsal raphe nucleus contribute to stress- and antidepressant-mediated gene expression and behavior

Author:

Al-Kachak Amni,Fulton Sasha L.,Di Salvo Giuseppina,Chan Jennifer C,Farrelly Lorna A.,Lepack Ashley E.,Bastle Ryan M.,Kong Lingchun,Cathomas Flurin,Newman Emily L.,Menard Caroline,Ramakrishnan Aarthi,Safovich Polina,Lyu Yang,Covington Herbert E.,Shen Li,Gleason Kelly,Tamminga Carol A.,Russo Scott J.,Maze Ian

Abstract

ABSTRACTBackgroundMajor depressive disorder (MDD), along with related mood disorders, is a debilitating illness that affects millions of individuals worldwide. While chronic stress increases incidence levels of mood disorders, stress-mediated disruptions in brain function that precipitate these illnesses remain elusive. Serotonin-associated antidepressants (ADs) remain the first line of therapy for many with depressive symptoms, yet low remission rates and delays between treatment and symptomatic alleviation have prompted skepticism regarding precise roles for serotonin in the precipitation of mood disorders. Our group recently demonstrated that serotonin epigenetically modifies histone proteins (H3K4me3Q5ser) to regulate transcriptional permissiveness in brain. However, this phenomenon has not yet been explored following stress and/or AD exposures.MethodsWe employed a combination of genome-wide and biochemical analyses in dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) of male and female mice exposed to chronic social defeat stress to examine the impact of stress exposures on H3K4me3Q5ser dynamics, as well as associations between the mark and stress-induced gene expression. We additionally assessed stress-induced regulation of H3K4me3Q5ser following AD exposures, and employed viral-mediated gene therapy to reduce H3K4me3Q5ser levels in DRN and examine the impact on stress-associated gene expression and behavior.ResultsWe found that H3K4me3Q5ser plays important roles in stress-mediated transcriptional plasticity. Chronically stressed mice displayed dysregulated H3K4me3Q5ser dynamics in DRN, with both AD- and viral-mediated disruption of these dynamics proving sufficient to rescue stress-mediated gene expression and behavior.ConclusionsThese findings establish a neurotransmission-independent role for serotonin in stress-/AD-associated transcriptional and behavioral plasticity in DRN.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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