Histone deacetylase inhibition reduces ventral tegmental area dopamine neuronal hyperexcitability involving AKAP150 signaling following maternal deprivation in juvenile male rats.
Ryan D ShepardLudovic D LangloisMichael E AuthementFereshteh S NugentPublished in: Journal of neuroscience research (2020)
Traumatic early life stress (ELS) is linked to dopamine (DA) dysregulation which increases the probability of developing psychiatric disorders in adolescence and adulthood. Our prior studies demonstrated that a severe early life stressor, a 24-hr maternal deprivation (MD) in juvenile male rats, could lead to altered DA signaling from the ventral tegmental area (VTA) due to impairment of GABAergic synaptic plasticity (promoting GABAergic long-term depression, LTD) with concomitant changes in the abundance of synaptic regulators including A-kinase anchoring protein (AKAP150). Importantly, these MD-induced synaptic changes in the VTA were accompanied by upregulation of histone deacetylase 2, histone hypoacetylation, and were reversible by HDAC inhibition. Using cell-attached and whole-cell patch clamp recordings, we found that MD stress also increased spontaneous VTA DA neuronal activity and excitability in juvenile male rats without affecting intrinsic excitability. Postsynaptic chemical disruption of AKAP150 and protein kinase A interaction increased VTA DA neuronal excitability in control non-MD rats mimicking the effects of MD on DA cell excitability with similar changes in membrane properties. Interestingly, this disruption decreased MD-induced VTA DA hyperexcitability. This MD-induced DA neuronal hyperexcitability could also be normalized at 24 hr after injection of the class 1 HDAC inhibitor, CI-994. Altogether, our data suggest that AKAP150 plays a critical role in the regulation of VTA DA neuronal excitability and that HDAC-mediated targeting of AKAP150 signaling could normalize VTA DA dysfunction following ELS thereby providing novel therapeutic targets for prevention of later life psychopathology.
Keyphrases
- histone deacetylase
- early life
- molecular dynamics
- transcranial direct current stimulation
- single cell
- depressive symptoms
- diabetic rats
- prefrontal cortex
- spinal cord
- cell therapy
- protein kinase
- oxidative stress
- spinal cord injury
- dna methylation
- early onset
- gene expression
- stem cells
- cell proliferation
- uric acid
- long non coding rna
- poor prognosis
- blood brain barrier
- signaling pathway
- drug delivery
- brain injury
- bone marrow
- tyrosine kinase
- amino acid
- mesenchymal stem cells
- heat stress
- antibiotic resistance genes