Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dx.doi.org/10.25673/86001
Title: Persistent increase in ventral hippocampal long-term potentiation by juvenile stress : a role for astrocytic glutamine synthetase
Author(s): Ivens, Sebastian
Çalışkan, Gürsel
Papageorgiou, Ismini
Cesetti, Tiziana
Malich, Ansgar
Kann, Oliver
Heinemann, UweLook up in the Integrated Authority File of the German National Library
Stork, Oliver
Albrecht, Anne
Issue Date: 2019
Type: Article
Language: English
URN: urn:nbn:de:gbv:ma9:1-1981185920-879548
Subjects: Astrocytes
Glutamate–glutamine cycle
Glutamine synthetase
Juvenile stress
LTP
Ventral hippocampus
Abstract: A traumatic childhood is among the most important risk factors for developing stressrelated psychopathologies such as posttraumatic stress disorder or depression later in life. However, despite the proven role of astrocytes in regulating transmitter release and synaptic plasticity, the contribution of astrocytic transmitter metabolism to such stress-induced psychopathologies is currently not understood. In rodents, childhood adversity can be modeled by juvenile stress exposure, resulting in increased anxiety, and impaired coping with stress in adulthood. We describe that such juvenile stress in rats, regardless of additional stress in adulthood, leads to reduced synaptic efficacy in the ventral CA1 (vCA1) Schaffer collaterals, but increased long-term potentiation (LTP) of synaptic transmission after high-frequency stimulation. We tested whether the glutamate–glutamine-cycle guides the lasting changes on plasticity observed after juvenile stress by blocking the astrocytic glutamate-degrading enzyme, glutamine synthetase (GS). Indeed, the pharmacological inhibition of GS by methionine sulfoximine in slices from naïve rats mimics the effect of juvenile stress on vCA1-LTP, while supplying glutamine is sufficient to normalize the LTP. Assessing steady-state mRNA levels in the vCA1 stratum radiatum reveals distinct shifts in the expression of GS, astrocytic glutamate, and glutamine transporters after stress in juvenility, adulthood, or combined juvenile/adult stress. While GS mRNA expression levels are lastingly reduced after juvenile stress, GS protein levels are maintained stable. Together our results suggest a critical role for astrocytes and the glutamate–glutamine cycle in mediating long-term effects of juvenile stress on plasticity in the vCA1, a region associated with anxiety and emotional memory processing.
URI: https://opendata.uni-halle.de//handle/1981185920/87954
http://dx.doi.org/10.25673/86001
Open Access: Open access publication
License: (CC BY 4.0) Creative Commons Attribution 4.0(CC BY 4.0) Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
Sponsor/Funder: Projekt DEAL 2020
Journal Title: Glia
Publisher: Wiley-Liss
Publisher Place: Bognor Regis [u.a.]
Volume: 67
Issue: 12
Original Publication: 10.1002/glia.23683
Page Start: 2279
Page End: 2293
Appears in Collections:Fakultät für Naturwissenschaften (OA)

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