H3 and H4 lysine acetylation correlates with developmental and experimentally induced adult experience-dependent plasticity in the mouse visual cortex

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Abstract

Histone posttranslational modifications play a fundamental role in orchestrating gene expression. In this work, we analyzed the acetylation of H3 and H4 histones (AcH3-AcH4) and its modulation by visual experience in the mouse visual cortex (VC) during normal development and in two experimental conditions that restore juvenile-like plasticity levels in adults (fluoxetine treatment and enriched environment). We found that AcH3-AcH4 declines with age and is upregulated by treatments restoring plasticity in the adult. We also found that visual experience modulates AcH3-AcH4 in young and adult plasticity-restored mice but not in untreated ones. Finally, we showed that the transporter vGAT is downregulated in adult plasticity-restored models. In summary, we identified a dynamic regulation of AcH3-AcH4, which is associated with high plasticity levels and enhanced by visual experience. These data, along with recent ones, indicate H3-H4 acetylation as a central hub in the control of experience-dependent plasticity in the VC.

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Vierci, G., Pannunzio, B., Bornia, N., & Rossi, F. M. (2016). H3 and H4 lysine acetylation correlates with developmental and experimentally induced adult experience-dependent plasticity in the mouse visual cortex. Journal of Experimental Neuroscience, 2016, 49–64. https://doi.org/10.4137/JEN.S39888

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