International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Feb 2023)

Overnight Corticosterone and Gene Expression in Mouse Hippocampus: Time Course during Resting Period

  • Aneta Jaszczyk,
  • Adrian M. Stankiewicz,
  • Joanna Goscik,
  • Alicja Majewska,
  • Tadeusz Jezierski,
  • Grzegorz R. Juszczak

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24032828
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 3
p. 2828

Abstract

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The aim of the experiment was to test the effect of an elevated level of glucocorticoids on the mouse hippocampal transcriptome after 12 h of treatment with corticosterone that was administered during an active phase of the circadian cycle. Additionally, we also tested the circadian changes in gene expression and the decay time of transcriptomic response to corticosterone. Gene expression was analyzed using microarrays. Obtained results show that transcriptomic responses to glucocorticoids are heterogeneous in terms of the decay time with some genes displaying persistent changes in expression during 9 h of rest. We have also found a considerable overlap between genes regulated by corticosterone and genes implicated previously in stress response. The examples of such genes are Acer2, Agt, Apod, Aqp4, Etnppl, Fabp7, Fam107a, Fjx1, Fmo2, Galnt15, Gjc2, Heph, Hes5, Htra1, Jdp2, Kif5a, Lfng, Lrg1, Mgp, Mt1, Pglyrp1, Pla2g3, Plin4, Pllp, Ptgds, Ptn, Slc2a1, Slco1c1, Sult1a1, Thbd and Txnip. This indicates that the applied model is a useful tool for the investigation of mechanisms underlying the stress response.

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