STRESS RESHAPES GENOMIC AND CIRCUIT-LEVEL ESTROGEN SIGNALING IN A SEX-DEPENDENT MANNER
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Presentation
Date TBA
Event Information
Poster Board
PS02-07PM-160
Poster
View posterAbstract
Estrogen regulates transcriptional programs in the brain through its nuclear receptors; however, the role of estrogen’s genomic pathway in shaping stress responses is poorly understood. To address this, we used CUT&RUN to investigate estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) binding in multiple stress-responsive brain regions at baseline and following chronic stress. Our analyses reveal region-, sex-, and estrous-stage-specific ERα binding patterns and demonstrate that stress markedly alters ERα regulatory activity, with particularly strong effects in the nucleus accumbens (NAc).
Estrogen can also influence neuronal activity through non-genomic mechanisms. Given the pronounced impact of stress on ERα binding in the NAc, we next examined how stress influences activity within estrogen-responsive circuits projecting to this region. Following chronic stress, we virally labeled ERα-positive cells that project to the NAc and performed brain clearing with immunolabeling for the viral marker and c-Fos. These analyses identify regions with sex-specific activity responses to stress and highlight those that are NAc-projecting and estrogen-responsive.
Together, these molecular and circuit approaches provide a framework for understanding how estrogen signaling contributes to sex-dependent stress vulnerability.
Recommended posters
INVESTIGATING SEX DIFFERENCES IN THE HYPOTHALAMIC BRAIN CIRCUITRY OF STRESS USING GENOMIC TECHNOLOGIES
Michelle Lam, Deshpande Sachin, Naresh K Hanchate
SEX-DEPENDENT STRESS PROGRAMMING OF EMOTIONAL CIRCUITS: A C-FOS ACTIVATION STUDY IN MICE
Víctor Martín, Pepe Muñoz Martín, Patricia Chaves-Peña, María Inmaculada Infantes López, Cristina Ramírez Pérez, Alejandro Zea Doña, Sergi Castillo Espinar, Estela del Mar Sosa Osorio, Margarita Pérez Martín, Carmen Pedraza Benítez
SEX-DEPENDENT ALTERATIONS IN HIPPOCAMPAL PROTEIN EXPRESSION INDUCED BY JUVENILE AND ADULT STRESS IN MICE
Patricia Chaves Peña, Jose Munoz-Martin, María Inmaculada Infantes-López, Víctor Martín-Aguiar, Alejandro Zea-Doña, Andrea Nieto-Quero, Margarita Pérez-Martín, Carmen Pedraza
SEX-SPECIFIC EFFECTS OF CHRONIC NON-DISCRIMINATORY SOCIAL DEFEAT STRESS (CNSDS) ON VENTRAL HIPPOCAMPAL PLASTICITY AND BEHAVIORAL VULNERABILITY
Giovanni Signorini, Eleonora De Felice, Valentina Ferretti, Bernadette Basilico, Donald Ielpo, Silvia Alboni, Luisa Lo Iacono, Diego Andolina, Laura Maggi
SEX-DEPENDENT NPAS4 EXPRESSION IN THE MEDIAL PREFRONTAL CORTEX PREDICTS RESILIENCE TO STRESS
Randriely Merscher Sobreira de Lima, Tie-Yuan Zhang, Eamon Fitzgerald, João Paulo Maires Hoppe, Danusa Mar Arcego, Derek Lupinsky, Maryia Bairachnaya, Xianglan Wen, Nicholas O’Toole, Carine Parent, Josie Diorio, Bruno Giros, Patrícia Pelufo Silveira, Michael J. Meaney
DECODING SEX-SPECIFIC VULNERABILITY TO ADOLESCENT SOCIAL STRESS THROUGH HOMECAGE BEHAVIOR AND SPATIAL PROTEOMICS
Tobias Pohl, Maria Steinecker, Anja Magister, Unger Clara, Luna Strauch, Hanna Hörnberg