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The Stress-Induced Transcription Factor NR4A1 Adjusts Mitochondrial Function and Synapse Number in Prefrontal Cortex

The energetic costs of behavioral chronic stress are unlikely to be sustainable without neuronal plasticity. Mitochondria have the capacity to handle synaptic activity up to a limit before energetic depletion occurs. Protective mechanisms driven by the induction of neuronal genes likely evolved to b...

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Autores principales: Jeanneteau, Freddy, Barrère, Christian, Vos, Mariska, De Vries, Carlie J.M., Rouillard, Claude, Levesque, Daniel, Dromard, Yann, Moisan, Marie-Pierre, Duric, Vanja, Franklin, Tina C., Duman, Ronald S., Lewis, David A., Ginsberg, Stephen D., Arango-Lievano, Margarita
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Society for Neuroscience 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5815341/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29295823
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2793-17.2017
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author Jeanneteau, Freddy
Barrère, Christian
Vos, Mariska
De Vries, Carlie J.M.
Rouillard, Claude
Levesque, Daniel
Dromard, Yann
Moisan, Marie-Pierre
Duric, Vanja
Franklin, Tina C.
Duman, Ronald S.
Lewis, David A.
Ginsberg, Stephen D.
Arango-Lievano, Margarita
author_facet Jeanneteau, Freddy
Barrère, Christian
Vos, Mariska
De Vries, Carlie J.M.
Rouillard, Claude
Levesque, Daniel
Dromard, Yann
Moisan, Marie-Pierre
Duric, Vanja
Franklin, Tina C.
Duman, Ronald S.
Lewis, David A.
Ginsberg, Stephen D.
Arango-Lievano, Margarita
author_sort Jeanneteau, Freddy
collection PubMed
description The energetic costs of behavioral chronic stress are unlikely to be sustainable without neuronal plasticity. Mitochondria have the capacity to handle synaptic activity up to a limit before energetic depletion occurs. Protective mechanisms driven by the induction of neuronal genes likely evolved to buffer the consequences of chronic stress on excitatory neurons in prefrontal cortex (PFC), as this circuitry is vulnerable to excitotoxic insults. Little is known about the genes involved in mitochondrial adaptation to the buildup of chronic stress. Using combinations of genetic manipulations and stress for analyzing structural, transcriptional, mitochondrial, and behavioral outcomes, we characterized NR4A1 as a stress-inducible modifier of mitochondrial energetic competence and dendritic spine number in PFC. NR4A1 acted as a transcription factor for changing the expression of target genes previously involved in mitochondrial uncoupling, AMP-activated protein kinase activation, and synaptic growth. Maintenance of NR4A1 activity by chronic stress played a critical role in the regressive synaptic organization in PFC of mouse models of stress (male only). Knockdown, dominant-negative approach, and knockout of Nr4a1 in mice and rats (male only) protected pyramidal neurons against the adverse effects of chronic stress. In human PFC tissues of men and women, high levels of the transcriptionally active NR4A1 correlated with measures of synaptic loss and cognitive impairment. In the context of chronic stress, prolonged expression and activity of NR4A1 may lead to responses of mitochondria and synaptic connectivity that do not match environmental demand, resulting in circuit malfunction between PFC and other brain regions, constituting a pathological feature across disorders. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The bioenergetic cost of chronic stress is too high to be sustainable by pyramidal prefrontal neurons. Cellular checkpoints have evolved to adjust the responses of mitochondria and synapses to the buildup of chronic stress. NR4A1 plays such a role by controlling the energetic competence of mitochondria with respect to synapse number. As an immediate-early gene, Nr4a1 promotes neuronal plasticity, but sustained expression or activity can be detrimental. NR4A1 expression and activity is sustained by chronic stress in animal models and in human studies of neuropathologies sensitive to the buildup of chronic stress. Therefore, antagonism of NR4A1 is a promising avenue for preventing the regressive synaptic reorganization in cortical systems in the context of chronic stress.
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spelling pubmed-58153412018-08-07 The Stress-Induced Transcription Factor NR4A1 Adjusts Mitochondrial Function and Synapse Number in Prefrontal Cortex Jeanneteau, Freddy Barrère, Christian Vos, Mariska De Vries, Carlie J.M. Rouillard, Claude Levesque, Daniel Dromard, Yann Moisan, Marie-Pierre Duric, Vanja Franklin, Tina C. Duman, Ronald S. Lewis, David A. Ginsberg, Stephen D. Arango-Lievano, Margarita J Neurosci Research Articles The energetic costs of behavioral chronic stress are unlikely to be sustainable without neuronal plasticity. Mitochondria have the capacity to handle synaptic activity up to a limit before energetic depletion occurs. Protective mechanisms driven by the induction of neuronal genes likely evolved to buffer the consequences of chronic stress on excitatory neurons in prefrontal cortex (PFC), as this circuitry is vulnerable to excitotoxic insults. Little is known about the genes involved in mitochondrial adaptation to the buildup of chronic stress. Using combinations of genetic manipulations and stress for analyzing structural, transcriptional, mitochondrial, and behavioral outcomes, we characterized NR4A1 as a stress-inducible modifier of mitochondrial energetic competence and dendritic spine number in PFC. NR4A1 acted as a transcription factor for changing the expression of target genes previously involved in mitochondrial uncoupling, AMP-activated protein kinase activation, and synaptic growth. Maintenance of NR4A1 activity by chronic stress played a critical role in the regressive synaptic organization in PFC of mouse models of stress (male only). Knockdown, dominant-negative approach, and knockout of Nr4a1 in mice and rats (male only) protected pyramidal neurons against the adverse effects of chronic stress. In human PFC tissues of men and women, high levels of the transcriptionally active NR4A1 correlated with measures of synaptic loss and cognitive impairment. In the context of chronic stress, prolonged expression and activity of NR4A1 may lead to responses of mitochondria and synaptic connectivity that do not match environmental demand, resulting in circuit malfunction between PFC and other brain regions, constituting a pathological feature across disorders. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The bioenergetic cost of chronic stress is too high to be sustainable by pyramidal prefrontal neurons. Cellular checkpoints have evolved to adjust the responses of mitochondria and synapses to the buildup of chronic stress. NR4A1 plays such a role by controlling the energetic competence of mitochondria with respect to synapse number. As an immediate-early gene, Nr4a1 promotes neuronal plasticity, but sustained expression or activity can be detrimental. NR4A1 expression and activity is sustained by chronic stress in animal models and in human studies of neuropathologies sensitive to the buildup of chronic stress. Therefore, antagonism of NR4A1 is a promising avenue for preventing the regressive synaptic reorganization in cortical systems in the context of chronic stress. Society for Neuroscience 2018-02-07 /pmc/articles/PMC5815341/ /pubmed/29295823 http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2793-17.2017 Text en Copyright © 2018 Wu, Lee et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium provided that the original work is properly attributed.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Jeanneteau, Freddy
Barrère, Christian
Vos, Mariska
De Vries, Carlie J.M.
Rouillard, Claude
Levesque, Daniel
Dromard, Yann
Moisan, Marie-Pierre
Duric, Vanja
Franklin, Tina C.
Duman, Ronald S.
Lewis, David A.
Ginsberg, Stephen D.
Arango-Lievano, Margarita
The Stress-Induced Transcription Factor NR4A1 Adjusts Mitochondrial Function and Synapse Number in Prefrontal Cortex
title The Stress-Induced Transcription Factor NR4A1 Adjusts Mitochondrial Function and Synapse Number in Prefrontal Cortex
title_full The Stress-Induced Transcription Factor NR4A1 Adjusts Mitochondrial Function and Synapse Number in Prefrontal Cortex
title_fullStr The Stress-Induced Transcription Factor NR4A1 Adjusts Mitochondrial Function and Synapse Number in Prefrontal Cortex
title_full_unstemmed The Stress-Induced Transcription Factor NR4A1 Adjusts Mitochondrial Function and Synapse Number in Prefrontal Cortex
title_short The Stress-Induced Transcription Factor NR4A1 Adjusts Mitochondrial Function and Synapse Number in Prefrontal Cortex
title_sort stress-induced transcription factor nr4a1 adjusts mitochondrial function and synapse number in prefrontal cortex
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5815341/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29295823
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2793-17.2017
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