Brain methylome remodeling selectively regulates neuronal activity genes linking to emotional behaviors in mice exposed to maternal immune activation.
Li MaFeng WangYangping LiJing WangQing ChangYuanning DuJotham SadanZhen ZhaoGuoping FanBing YaoJian-Fu ChenPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
How early life experience is translated into storable epigenetic information leading to behavioral changes remains poorly understood. Here we found that Zika virus (ZIKV) induced-maternal immune activation (MIA) imparts offspring with anxiety- and depression-like behavior. By integrating bulk and single-nucleus RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq) with genome-wide 5hmC (5-hydroxymethylcytosine) profiling and 5mC (5-methylcytosine) profiling in prefrontal cortex (PFC) of ZIKV-affected male offspring mice, we revealed an overall loss of 5hmC and an increase of 5mC levels in intragenic regions, associated with transcriptional changes in neuropsychiatric disorder-related genes. In contrast to their rapid initiation and inactivation in normal conditions, immediate-early genes (IEGs) remain a sustained upregulation with enriched expression in excitatory neurons, which is coupled with increased 5hmC and decreased 5mC levels of IEGs in ZIKV-affected male offspring. Thus, MIA induces maladaptive methylome remodeling in brain and selectively regulates neuronal activity gene methylation linking to emotional behavioral abnormalities in offspring.
Keyphrases
- zika virus
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- single cell
- high fat diet
- early life
- dengue virus
- prefrontal cortex
- copy number
- cerebral ischemia
- gene expression
- aedes aegypti
- poor prognosis
- rna seq
- resting state
- high fat diet induced
- magnetic resonance
- spinal cord
- birth weight
- transcription factor
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- blood brain barrier
- high glucose
- computed tomography
- healthcare
- signaling pathway
- functional connectivity
- weight gain
- oxidative stress
- physical activity
- social media
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- endothelial cells
- sensitive detection
- brain injury