Abstract

The activity-induced transcription factor ∆FosB has been implicated in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) as a critical regulator of hippocampal function and cognition downstream of seizures and network hyperexcitability. With its long half-life (> 1 week), ∆FosB is well-poised to modulate hippocampal gene expression over extended periods of time, enabling effects to persist even during seizure-free periods. However, the transcriptional mechanisms by which ∆FosB regulates hippocampal function are poorly understood due to lack of identified hippocampal gene targets. To identify putative ∆FosB gene targets, we employed high-throughput sequencing of genomic DNA bound to ∆FosB after chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP-sequencing). We compared ChIP-sequencing results from hippocampi of transgenic mice expressing mutant human amyloid precursor protein (APP) and nontransgenic (NTG) wild-type littermates. Surprisingly, only 52 ∆FosB gene targets were shared between NTG and APP mice; the vast majority of targets were unique to one genotype or the other. We also found a functional shift in the repertoire of ∆FosB gene targets between NTG and APP mice. A large number of targets in NTG mice are involved in neurodevelopment and/or cell morphogenesis, whereas in APP mice there is an enrichment of targets involved in regulation of membrane potential and neuronal excitability. RNA-sequencing and quantitative PCR experiments confirmed that expression of putative ∆FosB gene targets were altered in the hippocampus of APP mice. This study provides key insights into functional domains regulated by ∆FosB in the hippocampus, emphasizing remarkably different programs of gene regulation under physiological and pathological conditions.

Highlights

  • The leucine zipper transcription factor ΔFosB belongs to the immediate early gene (IEG) family of proteins that are induced by neuronal activation to enact various activity-dependent programs in the cell [1]

  • We discovered that seizures and epileptiform activity robustly increased ΔFosB expression in the hippocampus of a transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) expressing mutant human amyloid precursor protein (APP, line J20) as well as in pharmacological models of epilepsy [15, 16]

  • Given evidence that seizures and epileptiform activity contribute to cognitive decline in AD [17, 18], the finding that seizures in AD increase hippocampal ΔFosB expression provides a mechanism to explain how even intermittent ictal events can cause persistent cognitive deficits

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Summary

Introduction

The leucine zipper transcription factor ΔFosB belongs to the immediate early gene (IEG) family of proteins that are induced by neuronal activation to enact various activity-dependent programs in the cell [1]. The chronic and persistent nature of ΔFosB’s effect on neuronal and network function has been well-characterized in the nucleus accumbens, where it modifies addictive behavior following repetitive exposure to drugs of abuse [4] Such studies showed that ΔFosB epigenetically enhances or silences transcription of various target genes via recruitment of histone-modifying enzymes such as p300/CBP or HDAC1 to target gene promoters, respectively [5,6,7]. Gene target profiles were generated using hippocampi obtained from both APP mice and nontransgenic (NTG) wild-type littermates from the same line of J20 APP mice used in our original studies [15, 16] The results of this ChIP-seq analysis demonstrated that the repertoire of ΔFosB gene targets in the hippocampus covers broad functional domains, from cell-cell adhesion to regulation of ion channels and transporters. Diversification of hippocampal ΔFosB gene targets in Alzheimer’s disease are coordinated by ΔFosB in the hippocampus of APP mice and potentially other animal models with recurrent seizures

Materials and methods
C GO terms for ΔFosB gene
Results
Discussion

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