Transcriptomic effects of paternal cocaine-seeking on the reward circuitry of male offspring

被引:0
作者
Nan Huang
Jian Cui
Guangyuan Fan
Tao Pan
Kunxiu Han
Kailiang Xu
Changyou Jiang
Xing Liu
Feifei Wang
Lan Ma
Qiumin Le
机构
[1] Fudan University,School of Basic Medical Sciences, State Key Laboratory of Medical Neurobiology, MOE Frontiers Center for Brain Science, Institutes of Brain Science, Department of Neurology, Huashan Hospital
[2] Fudan University,Center for Biomedical Engineering, School of Information Science and Technology
[3] Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences (2021RU009),Research Unit of Addiction Memory
来源
Translational Psychiatry | / 14卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
It has been previously established that paternal development of a strong incentive motivation for cocaine can predispose offspring to develop high cocaine-seeking behavior, as opposed to sole exposure to the drug that results in drug resistance in offspring. However, the adaptive changes of the reward circuitry have not been fully elucidated. To infer the key nuclei and possible hub genes that determine susceptibility to addiction in offspring, rats were randomly assigned to three groups, cocaine self-administration (CSA), yoked administration (Yoke), and saline self-administration (SSA), and used to generate F1. We conducted a comprehensive transcriptomic analysis of the male F1 offspring across seven relevant brain regions, both under drug-naïve conditions and after cocaine self-administration. Pairwise differentially expressed gene analysis revealed that the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) exhibited more pronounced transcriptomic changes in response to cocaine exposure, while the dorsal hippocampus (dHip), dorsal striatum (dStr), and ventral tegmental area (VTA) exhibited changes that were more closely associated with the paternal voluntary cocaine-seeking behavior. Consistently, these nuclei showed decreased dopamine levels, elevated neuronal activation, and elevated between-nuclei correlations, indicating dopamine-centered rewiring of the midbrain circuit in the CSA offspring. To determine if possible regulatory cascades exist that drive the expression changes, we constructed co-expression networks induced by paternal drug addiction and identified three key clusters, primarily driven by transcriptional factors such as MYT1L, POU3F4, and NEUROD6, leading to changes of genes regulating axonogenesis, synapse organization, and membrane potential, respectively. Collectively, our data highlight vulnerable neurocircuitry and novel regulatory candidates with therapeutic potential for disrupting the transgenerational inheritance of vulnerability to cocaine addiction.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 248 条
[1]  
Johnson JL(1999)Children of substance abusers: Overview of research findings Pediatrics 103 1085-99
[2]  
Leff M(2015)Molecular insights into transgenerational non-genetic inheritance of acquired behaviours Nat Rev Genet 16 641-52
[3]  
Bohacek J(2019)Advances in epigenetics link genetics to the environment and disease Nature 571 489-99
[4]  
Mansuy IM(2021)Heritable consequences of paternal nicotine exposure: from phenomena to mechanisms dagger Biol Reprod 105 632-43
[5]  
Cavalli G(1991)Long-term consequences of prenatal exposure to cocaine or related drugs - effects on rat-brain monoaminergic receptors Brain Res Bull 26 941-5
[6]  
Heard E(1992)Cocaine inutero enhances the behavioral-response to cocaine in adult-rats Pharmacol Biochem Behav 42 509-15
[7]  
McCarthy DM(1992)Effects of prenatal exposure to cocaine on conditional discrimination-learning in adult-rats Behav Neurosci 106 837-45
[8]  
Bhide PG(1996)Nonuniform alteration of dendritic development in the cerebral cortex following prenatal cocaine exposure Cerebral Cortex 6 431-45
[9]  
Henderson MG(2003)Prenatal cocaine/polydrug exposure and infant performance on an executive functioning task Dev Neuropsychol 24 499-517
[10]  
McConnaughey MM(2014)What is a paternal effect? Trends Ecol Evol 29 554-9