Experience Modulates the Effects of Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors on Gene and Protein Expression in the Hippocampus: Impaired Plasticity in Aging.
Angila S SewalHolger PatzkeEvelyn J PerezPul ParkElin LehrmannYongqing ZhangKevin G BeckerBonnie R FletcherJeffrey M LongPeter R RappPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2015)
The possibility that interventions targeting epigenetic regulation could be effective in treating a range of neurodegenerative disorders has attracted considerable interest. Here we demonstrate in the rat hippocampus that ongoing experience powerfully modifies the molecular response to one such intervention, histone deacetylase inhibitor (HDACi) administration. A single learning episode dramatically shifts the gene expression profile induced by acute HDACi treatment, yielding a qualitatively distinct hippocampal transcriptome compared with the influence of behavioral training alone. The downstream synaptic protein response to HDACi administration is similarly experience-dependent, and we report that this plasticity is disrupted in the aged hippocampus. The findings highlight that accommodating the modulatory influence of ongoing experience represents a challenge for therapeutic development in the area of cognitive neuroepigenetics.
Keyphrases
- histone deacetylase
- genome wide
- cerebral ischemia
- prefrontal cortex
- randomized controlled trial
- gene expression
- cognitive impairment
- copy number
- physical activity
- single cell
- brain injury
- respiratory failure
- intensive care unit
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- rna seq
- binding protein
- drug induced
- hepatitis b virus
- blood brain barrier
- genome wide analysis