Abstract
Infant maternal separation, a paradigm of early life stress in rodents, elicits long-lasting changes in gene expression that persist into adulthood. In BALB/c mice, an inbred strain with spontaneously elevated anxiety and stress reactivity, infant maternal separation led to increased depression-like behavioral responses to adult stress and robustly increased editing of serotonin 2C receptor pre-mRNA. Chronic fluoxetine treatment of adult BALB/c mice exposed to early life stress affected neither their behavioral responses to stress nor their basal 5-HT2C pre-mRNA editing phenotype. However, when fluoxetine was administered during adolescence, depression-like behavioral responses to stress were significantly diminished in these mice, and their basal and stress-induced 5-HT2C pre-mRNA editing phenotypes were significantly lower. Moreover, when BALB/c mice exposed to early life stress were raised in an enriched postweaning environment, their depression-like behavioral responses to adult stress were also significantly diminished. However, their 5-HT2C pre-mRNA editing phenotype remained unaltered. Hence, the similar behavioral effects of enrichment and fluoxetine treatment during adolescence were not accompanied by similar changes in 5-HT2C pre-mRNA editing. Enriched and nonenriched BALB/c mice exposed to early life stress also exhibited significantly increased expression of mRNA and protein encoding the Gαq subunit of G-protein that couples to 5-HT2A/2C receptors. In contrast, Gαq expression levels were significantly lower in fluoxetine-treated mice. These findings suggest that compensatory changes in Gαq expression occur in mice with persistently altered 5-HT2C pre-mRNA editing and provide an explanation for the dissociation between 5-HT2C receptor editing phenotypes and behavioral stress responses. Copyright © 2007 Society for Neuroscience.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Bhansali, P., Dunning, J., Singer, S. E., David, L., & Schmauss, C. (2007). Early life stress alters adult serotonin 2C receptor pre-mRNA editing and expression of the α subunit of the heterotrimeric G-protein Gq. Journal of Neuroscience, 27(6), 1467–1473. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4632-06.2007
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.