Neurobiology of Stress (Nov 2021)

Corticosterone dynamically regulates retrotransposable element expression in the rat hippocampus and C6 cells

  • A.A. Bartlett,
  • H. DeRosa,
  • M. Clark,
  • H.E. Lapp,
  • G. Guffanti,
  • R.G. Hunter

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15
p. 100397

Abstract

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The hippocampus is a highly plastic brain region sensitive to environmental stress. It shows dynamic changes in epigenetic marks associated with stress related learning. Previous work has shown that acute stress induces substantial transient changes in histone H3 lysine 9 trimethylation (H3K9me3). Moreover, increased H3K9me3 is enriched in hippocampal gene deserts accumulating within endogenous retroviruses and transposable elements. We have found that in response to acute glucocorticoid treatment, a similar change in global H3K9me3 is observed. However, when localized we found that H3K9me3 is markedly decreased at B2 short interspersed nuclear elements but not within intracisternal-A particle endogenous retroviruses. Further, decreased H3K9me3 valence within B2 elements was associated with increased transcript abundance. These data demonstrate the capacity for acute glucocorticoids to mobilize transposable elements via epigenetic unmasking. Reconciled with previous findings following acute stress, this suggests the capacity for mobile elements to potentially function as novel regulators given their dynamic regulation by stress and glucocorticoids.

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