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Publication : Regulation of neuronal gene expression and survival by basal NMDA receptor activity: a role for histone deacetylase 4.

First Author  Chen Y Year  2014
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  34
Issue  46 Pages  15327-39
PubMed ID  25392500 Mgi Jnum  J:238182
Mgi Id  MGI:5818429 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0569-14.2014
Citation  Chen Y, et al. (2014) Regulation of neuronal gene expression and survival by basal NMDA receptor activity: a role for histone deacetylase 4. J Neurosci 34(46):15327-39
abstractText  Neuronal gene expression is modulated by activity via calcium-permeable receptors such as NMDA receptors (NMDARs). While gene expression changes downstream of evoked NMDAR activity have been well studied, much less is known about gene expression changes that occur under conditions of basal neuronal activity. In mouse dissociated hippocampal neuronal cultures, we found that a broad NMDAR antagonist, AP5, induced robust gene expression changes under basal activity, but subtype-specific antagonists did not. While some of the gene expression changes are also known to be downstream of stimulated NMDAR activity, others appear specific to basal NMDAR activity. The genes altered by AP5 treatment of basal cultures were enriched for pathways related to class IIa histone deacetylases (HDACs), apoptosis, and synapse-related signaling. Specifically, AP5 altered the expression of all three class IIa HDACs that are highly expressed in the brain, HDAC4, HDAC5, and HDAC9, and also induced nuclear accumulation of HDAC4. HDAC4 knockdown abolished a subset of the gene expression changes induced by AP5, and led to neuronal death under long-term tetrodotoxin or AP5 treatment in rat hippocampal organotypic slice cultures. These data suggest that basal, but not evoked, NMDAR activity regulates gene expression in part through HDAC4, and, that HDAC4 has neuroprotective functions under conditions of low NMDAR activity.
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