Mice subjected to social isolation (3-4 weeks) exhibit enhanced contextual fear responses and impaired fear extinction. These responses are time-related to a decrease of 5␣-reductase type I (5␣-RI) mRNA expression and allopregnanolone (Allo) levels in selected neurons of the medial prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, and basolateral amygdala. Of note, the cued fear response was not different between group housed and socially isolated mice. In socially isolated mice, S-norfluoxetine, a selective brain steroidogenic stimulant (SBSS), in doses (0.45-1.8 mol/kg) that increase brain Allo levels but fail to inhibit serotonin reuptake, greatly attenuates enhanced contextual fear response. SKF 105,111 (a potent 5␣-RI inhibitor) decreases corticolimbic Allo levels and enhances the contextual fear response in group housed mice, which suggests that social isolation alters emotional responses by reducing the positive allosteric modulation of Allo at GABAA receptors in corticolimbic circuits. Thus, these procedures model emotional hyperreactivity, including enhanced contextual fear and impaired contextual fear extinction, which also is observed in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) patients. A recent clinical study reported that cerebrospinal fluid Allo levels also are downregulated in PTSD patients and correlate negatively with PTSD symptoms and negative mood. Thus, protracted social isolation of mice combined with tests of fear conditioning may be a suitable model to study emotional behavioral components associated with neurochemical alterations relating to PTSD. Importantly, drugs like SBSSs, which rapidly increase corticolimbic Allo levels, normalize the exaggerated contextual fear responses resulting from social isolation, suggesting that selective activation of neurosteroidogenesis may be useful in PTSD therapy.fear conditioning ͉ selective brain steroidogenic stimulants
Cortical GABAergic dysfunction, a hallmark of both schizophrenia (SZ) and bipolar (BP) disorder pathophysiologies may relate to the hypermethylation of GABAergic gene promoters (i.e., reelin and GAD67). Benefits elicited by a combination of atypical antipsychotics with valproate (VPA) (a histone deacetylase inhibitor that may also activate brain DNA demethylation) in SZ or BP disorder treatment prompted us to investigate whether the beneficial action of this association depends on induction of a putative DNA demethylase activity. To monitor this activity, we measured the ratio of 5-methyl cytosine to unmethylated cytosine in reelin and GAD67 promoters in the mouse frontal cortex and striatum. We compared normal mice with mice pretreated with L-methionine (5.2 mmol/kg s.c. twice a day for 7 days) to hypermethylate promoters, including reelin and GAD67. Clinically relevant doses of clozapine (CLZ) (3.8 to 15 mol/kg twice a day s.c. for 3 days) and sulpiride (SULP) (12.5 to 50 mol/kg twice a day for 3 days) but not clinically relevant doses of haloperidol (HAL) (1.3 to 4 mol/kg twice a day s.c. for 3 days) or olanzapine (OLZ) (4 to 15 mol/kg twice a day for 3 days) exhibited dose-related increases in the cortical and striatal demethylation of hypermethylated reelin and GAD67 promoters. These effects of CLZ and SULP were dramatically potentiated by a clinically relevant VPA dose (0.5 mmol/kg twice a day for 3 days). By activating a DNA demethylase, the association of CLZ or SULP with VPA may facilitate a chromatin remodeling that normalizes the GABAergic gene expression down-regulation detected in the telencephalic regions of SZ and BP patients.antipsychotics ͉ chromatin remodeling ͉ valproate ͉ GAD67 ͉ reelin I n specific populations of telencephalic GABAergic neurons of patients with schizophrenia (SZ) and bipolar (BP) disorder, down-regulation of the expression of several vulnerability genes, including GAD67 (GAD1), reelin (RELN), NR2A (GRIN2A), and GAT1 (SLC6A1) (1-4), is probably related to an hypermethylation of the corresponding promoters (5, 6), which could be sustained by an hyperactivity of DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) including DNMT1 and DNMT3a (7,8, Veldic, personal communication). This concept is supported by clinical studies performed several decades ago with L-methionine (MET) administration to SZ patients. Such a treatment for 2-3 weeks in doses of 10-20 g/day, exacerbates psychotic symptoms in 40-50% of SZ patients (9), likely by increasing the brain levels of the methyl-donor S-adenosyl-methionine (SAM), which is the natural cofactor for the catalytic activity of DNMTs.In the mouse frontal cortex (FC), the increase of SAM content elicited by protracted MET treatment induces a covalent methylation in the 5Ј position of the cytosine ring at dinucleotide CG or tri-nucleotide CNG sequences of specific promoters † , including those corresponding to reelin and GAD67 (10, 11). The hypermethylation of reelin and GAD67 promoters induced by MET is likely responsible for the transcriptional down-regulation ...
The neurosteroid allopregnanolone is a potent positive allosteric modulator of GABA action at GABA(A) receptors. Allopregnanolone is synthesized in the brain from progesterone by the sequential action of 5alpha-reductase type I (5alpha-RI) and 3alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3alpha-HSD). 5alpha-RI and 3alpha-HSD are co-expressed in cortical, hippocampal, and olfactory bulb glutamatergic neurons and in output neurons of the amygdala, thalamus, cerebellum, and striatum. Neither 5alpha-RI nor 3alpha-HSD mRNAs is expressed in glial cells or in cortical or hippocampal GABAergic interneurons. It is likely that allopregnanolone synthesized in principal output neurons locally modulates GABA(A) receptor function by reaching GABA(A) receptor intracellular sites through lateral membrane diffusion. This review will focus on the behavioral effects of allopregnanolone on mouse models that are related to a sexually dimorphic regulation of brain allopregnanolone biosynthesis. Animal models of psychiatric disorders, including socially isolated male mice or mice that receive a long-term treatment with anabolic androgenic steroids (AAS), show abnormal behaviors such as altered fear responses and aggression. In these animal models, the cortico-limbic mRNA expression of 5alpha-RI is regulated in a sexually dimorphic manner. Hence, in selected glutamatergic pyramidal neurons of the cortex, CA3, and basolateral amygdala and in granular cells of the dentate gyrus, mRNA expression of 5alpha-RI is decreased, which results in a downregulation of allopregnanolone content. In contrast, 5alpha-RI mRNA expression fails to change in the striatum medium spiny neurons and in the reticular thalamic nucleus neurons, which are GABAergic.By manipulating allopregnanolone levels in glutamatergic cortico-limbic neurons in opposite directions to improve [using the potent selective brain steroidogenic stimulant (SBSS) S-norfluoxetine] or induce (using the potent 5alpha-RI inhibitor SKF 105,111) behavioral deficits, respectively, we have established the fundamental role of cortico-limbic allopregnanolone levels in the sexually dimorphic regulation of aggression and fear. By selectively targeting allopregnanolone downregulation in glutamatergic cortico-limbic neurons, i.e., by improving the response of GABA(A) receptors to GABA, new therapeutics would offer appropriate and safe management of psychiatric conditions, including impulsive aggression, irritability, irrational fear, anxiety, posttraumatic stress disorders, and depression.
The pharmacological action of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor antidepressants may include a normalization of the decreased brain levels of the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and of neurosteroids such as the progesterone metabolite allopregnanolone, which are decreased in patients with depression and posttraumatic stress disorders (PTSD). The allopregnanolone and BDNF level decrease in PTSD and depressed patients is associated with behavioral symptom severity. Antidepressant treatment upregulates both allopregnanolone levels and the expression of BDNF in a manner that significantly correlates with improved symptomatology, which suggests that neurosteroid biosynthesis and BDNF expression may be interrelated. Preclinical studies using the socially isolated mouse as an animal model of behavioral deficits, which resemble some of the symptoms observed in PTSD patients, have shown that fluoxetine and derivatives improve anxiety-like behavior, fear responses and aggressive behavior by elevating the corticolimbic levels of allopregnanolone and BDNF mRNA expression. These actions appeared to be independent and more selective than the action of these drugs on serotonin reuptake inhibition. Hence, this review addresses the hypothesis that in PTSD or depressed patients, brain allopregnanolone levels, and BDNF expression upregulation may be mechanisms at least partially involved in the beneficial actions of antidepressants or other selective brain steroidogenic stimulant molecules.
A decrease of brain allopregnanolone biosynthesis may play a role in emotion, impulsive behavior, and anxiety spectrum disorders by decreasing GABAergic neurotransmission. In male mice, four weeks of social isolation induces behavioral dysfunctions such as aggression, fear, and anxiety-like behavior associated with a decrease in allopregnanolone biosynthesis in selected corticolimbic structures comprising the basolateral amygdala (BLA), olfactory bulb, hippocampus, and medial prefrontal cortex. Importantly, no decrease in allopregnanolone biosynthesis has been found in the striatum and cerebellum. Given the importance of the amygdaloid complex in emotional behavior, we hypothesized that this brain area may play a pivotal role in decreasing social isolation-induced aggression. Thus, socially isolated mice were directly infused with Snorfluoxetine (S-NFLX) or pregnanolone (an analog of allopregnanolone) into the BLA and striatum. When S-NFLX (2.5, 3.75, and 5 nmol/0.2 μl) or pregnanolone (1.25, 2.5, 3.75, and 5.0 nmol/0.2 μl) is directly infused into the BLA, these agents dose-dependently reduced aggression (S-NFLX up to 93% and pregnanolone up to 96%) of a socially isolated mouse to a same-sex intruder. However, S-NFLX (3.75 and 5 nmol) infused directly into the striatum failed to alter aggression. Allopregnanolone content in the BLA after S-NFLX (3.75 nmol) infusion was increased by 3-fold and in the hippocampus, by 80%. Allopregnanolone levels did not change in the olfactory bulb or in the frontal cortex of the same mice. S-NFLX (3.75 nmol) infused into the striatum failed to increase the levels of allopregnanolone.These results suggest that S-NFLX, acting as a selective brain steroidogenic stimulant (SBSS), increases corticolimbic allopregnanolone levels and regulates aggression, which underscore the pivotal role of the BLA and hippocampus in the regulation of aggressiveness in socially isolated mice.
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