4.7 Article

Glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper quantifies stressors and increases male susceptibility to PTSD

Journal

TRANSLATIONAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41398-019-0509-3

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Funding

  1. FP7 Grant from the European Research Council [260463]
  2. Israel Science Foundation [1565/15, 1916/12]
  3. Chief Scientist Office of the Israeli Ministry of Health [3-11389]
  4. Federal Ministry of Education and Research [01KU1501A]
  5. I-CORE Program of the Planning and Budgeting Committee
  6. Nella and Leon Benoziyo Center for Neurological Diseases
  7. Henry Chanoch Krenter Institute for Biomedical Imaging and Genomics
  8. Perlman Family Foundation
  9. Adelis Foundation
  10. Marc Besen and the Pratt Foundation
  11. Irving I. Moskowitz Foundation
  12. Behrens-Weise Foundation
  13. National Institute of Mental Health [MH071537, HD071982, MH100122, MH085806]
  14. European Research Council (ERC) [260463] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) selectively develops in some individuals exposed to a traumatic event. Genetic and epigenetic changes in glucocorticoid pathway sensitivity may be essential for understanding individual susceptibility to PTSD. This study focuses on PTSD markers in the glucocorticoid pathway, spotlighting glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper (GILZ), a transcription factor encoded by the gene Tsc22d3 on the X chromosome. We propose that GILZ uniquely quantifies exposure to stressors experienced from late gestation to adulthood and that low levels of GILZ predispose individuals to PTSD in males only. GILZ mRNA and methylation were measured in 396 male and female human blood samples from the Grady Trauma Project cohort (exposed to multiple traumatic events). In mice, changes in glucocorticoid pathway genes were assessed following exposure to stressors at distinct time points: (i) CRF-induced prenatal stress (CRF-inducedPNS) with, or without, additional exposure to (ii) PTSD induction protocol in adulthood, which induces PTSD-like behaviors in a subset of mice. In humans, the number of traumatic events correlated negatively with GILZ mRNA levels and positively with % methylation of GILZ in males only. In male mice, we observed a threefold increase in the number of offspring exhibiting PTSD-like behaviors in those exposed to both CRF-inducedPNS and PTSD induction. This susceptibility was associated with reduced GILZ mRNA levels and epigenetic changes, not found in females. Furthermore, virus-mediated shRNA knockdown of amygdalar GILZ increased susceptibility to PTSD. Mouse and human data confirm that dramatic alterations in GILZ occur in those exposed to a stressor in early life, adulthood or both. Therefore, GILZ levels may help identify at-risk populations for PTSD prior to additional traumatic exposures.

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