Wheel-Running Exercise Alleviates Anxiety-Like Behavior via Down-Regulating S-Nitrosylation of Gephyrin in the Basolateral Amygdala of Male Rats.
Ping-Fen YangTai-Lei NieXia-Nan SunLan-Xin XuCong MaFang WangLi-Hong LongJian-Guo ChenPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2024)
Physical exercise has beneficial effect on anxiety disorders, but the underlying molecular mechanism remains largely unknown. Here, it is demonstrated that physical exercise can downregulate the S-nitrosylation of gephyrin (SNO-gephyrin) in the basolateral amygdala (BLA) to exert anxiolytic effects. It is found that the level of SNO-gephyrin is significantly increased in the BLA of high-anxiety rats and a downregulation of SNO-gephyrin at cysteines 212 and 284 produced anxiolytic effect. Mechanistically, inhibition of SNO-gephyrin by either Cys212 or Cys284 mutations increased the surface expression of GABA A R γ2 and the subsequent GABAergic neurotransmission, exerting anxiolytic effect in male rats. On the other side, overexpression of neuronal nitric oxide synthase in the BLA abolished the anxiolytic-like effects of physical exercise. This study reveals a key role of downregulating SNO-gephyrin in the anxiolytic effects of physical exercise, providing a new explanation for protein post-translational modifications in the brain after exercise.
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