Chris Murgatroyd
Manchester Metropolitan University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Chris Murgatroyd.
Nature Neuroscience | 2009
Chris Murgatroyd; Alexandre V. Patchev; Yonghe Wu; Vincenzo Micale; Yvonne Bockmühl; Dieter Fischer; Florian Holsboer; Carsten T. Wotjak; Osborne F. X. Almeida; Dietmar Spengler
Adverse early life events can induce long-lasting changes in physiology and behavior. We found that early-life stress (ELS) in mice caused enduring hypersecretion of corticosterone and alterations in passive stress coping and memory. This phenotype was accompanied by a persistent increase in arginine vasopressin (AVP) expression in neurons of the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus and was reversed by an AVP receptor antagonist. Altered Avp expression was associated with sustained DNA hypomethylation of an important regulatory region that resisted age-related drifts in methylation and centered on those CpG residues that serve as DNA-binding sites for the methyl CpG–binding protein 2 (MeCP2). We found that neuronal activity controlled the ability of MeCP2 to regulate activity-dependent transcription of the Avp gene and induced epigenetic marking. Thus, ELS can dynamically control DNA methylation in postmitotic neurons to generate stable changes in Avp expression that trigger neuroendocrine and behavioral alterations that are frequent features in depression.
Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2007
Rainer Landgraf; Melanie S. Kessler; Mirjam Bunck; Chris Murgatroyd; Dietmar Spengler; Marina Zimbelmann; Markus Nussbaumer; Ludwig Czibere; Christoph W. Turck; Nicolas Singewald; Dan Rujescu; Elisabeth Frank
Two animal models of trait anxiety, HAB/LAB rats and mice, are described, representing inborn extremes in anxiety-related behavior. The comprehensive phenotypical characterization included basal behavioral features, stress-coping strategies and neuroendocrine responses upon stressor exposure with HAB animals being hyper-anxious, preferring passive coping, emitting more stressor-induced ultrasonic vocalization calls and showing typical peculiarities of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis and line-specific patterns of Fos expression in the brain indicative of differential neuronal activation. In most cases, unselected Wistar rats and CD1 mice, respectively, displayed intermediate behaviors. In both HAB/LAB rats and mice, the behavioral phenotype has been found to be significantly correlated with the expression of the neuropeptide arginine vasopressin (AVP) at the level of the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN). Additional receptor antagonist approaches in HABs confirmed that intra-PVN release of AVP is likely to contribute to hyper-anxiety and depression-like behavior. As shown exemplarily in HAB rats and LAB mice, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in regulatory structures of the AVP gene underlie AVP-mediated phenotypic phenomena; in HAB rats, a SNP in the promoter of the AVP gene leads to reduced binding of the transcriptional repressor CBF-A, thus causing AVP overexpression and overrelease. Conversely, in LAB mice, a SNP in the AVP gene seems to cause an amino acid exchange in the signal peptide, presumably leading to a deficit in bioavailable AVP likely to underlie the total hypo-anxiety of LAB mice in combination with signs of central diabetes insipidus. Another feature of LAB mice is overexpression of glyoxalase-I. The functional characterization of this enzyme will determine its involvement in anxiety-related behavior beyond that of a reliable biomarker. The further identification of quantitative trait loci, candidate genes (and their products) and SNPs will not only help to explain inter-individual variation in emotional behavior, but will also reveal novel targets for anxiolytic and antidepressive interventions.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004
Chris Murgatroyd; Alexandra Wigger; Elisabeth Frank; Nicolas Singewald; Mirjam Bunck; Florian Holsboer; Rainer Landgraf; Dietmar Spengler
Two inbred rat lines have been developed that show either high (HAB) or low (LAB) anxiety-related behavior. The behavioral phenotype correlates with arginine vasopressin (AVP) expression at the level of the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN), but not supraoptic nucleus, with HAB animals overexpressing the neuropeptide in both magnocellular and parvocellular subdivisions of the PVN. We detected a number of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the AVP locus that differ between the HAB and LAB animals, two of which were embedded in cis-regulatory elements. The HAB-specific allele of the AVP gene promoter occurs in 1.5% of outbred Wistar rats and is more transcriptionally active in vivo, as revealed by allele-specific transcription studies in cross-mated HAB/LAB F1 animals. Interestingly, one specific SNP [A(-1276)G] conferred reduced binding of the transcriptional repressor CArG binding factor A (CBF-A) in the HAB allele, the consequent differential regulation of the AVP promoter resulting in an overexpression of AVP in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, CBF-A is highly coexpressed in AVP-containing neurons of the PVN supporting an important role for regulation of AVP gene expression in vivo. Taken together, our results demonstrate a role for an AVP gene polymorphism and CBF-A in elevated AVP expression in the PVN of HAB rats likely to contribute to their behavioral and neuroendocrine phenotype.
Frontiers in Psychiatry | 2011
Chris Murgatroyd; Dietmar Spengler
Comprehensive clinical studies show that adverse conditions in early life can severely impact the developing brain and increase vulnerability to mood disorders later in life. During early postnatal life the brain exhibits high plasticity which allows environmental signals to alter the trajectories of rapidly developing circuits. Adversity in early life is able to shape the experience-dependent maturation of stress-regulating pathways underlying emotional functions and endocrine responses to stress, such as the hypothalamo–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) system, leading to long-lasting altered stress responsivity during adulthood. To date, the study of gene–environment interactions in the human population has been dominated by epidemiology. However, recent research in the neuroscience field is now advancing clinical studies by addressing specifically the mechanisms by which gene–environment interactions can predispose individuals toward psychopathology. To this end, appropriate animal models are being developed in which early environmental factors can be manipulated in a controlled manner. Here we will review recent studies performed with the common aim of understanding the effects of the early environment in shaping brain development and discuss the newly developing role of epigenetic mechanisms in translating early life conditions into long-lasting changes in gene expression underpinning brain functions. Particularly, we argue that epigenetic mechanisms can mediate the gene–environment dialog in early life and give rise to persistent epigenetic programming of adult physiology and dysfunction eventually resulting in disease. Understanding how early life experiences can give rise to lasting epigenetic marks conferring increased risk for mental disorders, how they are maintained and how they could be reversed, is increasingly becoming a focus of modern psychiatry and should pave new guidelines for timely therapeutic interventions.
Epigenetics | 2010
Chris Murgatroyd; Yonghe Wu; Yvonne Bockmühl; Dietmar Spengler
Early-life stress induces persistent memory traces on our genes and programs the life-long risk for depression. Epigenetic marking of the arginine vasopressin (AVP) gene by early-life stress in mice underpins sustained expression and increased hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activity, triggering endocrine and behavioral alterations that are frequent features in depression. This epigenetic memory evolves in two steps coordinated by the epigenetic reader and writer MeCP2. While early derepression of AVP is driven by neuronal activity causing Ca2+/calmodulin kinase-dependent phosphorylation and dissociation of MeCP2, subsequent hypomethylation at the AVP enhancer gradually develops to sustain derepression. In a vicious circle MeCP2 occupancy uncouples from the initial stimulus and leads to the hard-coding of early-life experience at the level of DNA methylation. The sequential order of these events demarcates the transition from a preliminary to a persistent, possibly irreversible, epigenetic memory and thus defines a critical time window for the timely therapy of severe trauma.
Stress | 2011
Chris Murgatroyd; Dietmar Spengler
Stress during early life can impact the developing brain and increase vulnerability to mood disorders later in life. Here, we argue that epigenetic mechanisms can mediate the gene–environment dialogue in early life and give rise to persistent epigenetic programming of adult physiology eventually resulting in disease. Early life stress in mice leads to epigenetic marking of the arginine vasopressin (AVP) gene underpinning sustained expression and increased hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis activity. This epigenetic memory is laid down in the parvocellular neurons of the paraventricular nucleus and involves Ca2+/calmodulin kinase-mediated phosphorylation of the methyl-CpG binding domain protein MeCP2 leading to dissociation from its DNA-binding site and derepression of the AVP gene. The reduced occupancy of MeCP2 during this early stage of life facilitates the development of hypomethylation at the AVP enhancer, which sustains derepression throughout later life and thereby serves to hardwire early life experiences. The sequential order of these events may represent a critical time window for the preventive therapy of severe trauma.
Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2013
Chris Murgatroyd; Benjamin C. Nephew
Maternal mood disorders such as depression and chronic anxiety can negatively affect the lives of both mothers and their adult offspring. An active focus of maternal depression and anxiety research has been the role of chronic social stress in the development of these disorders. Chronic exposure to social stress is common in humans, especially in lactating mothers, and postpartum mood disorders have been correlated with high levels of social conflict and low levels of social support. Recent studies have described an effective and ethologically relevant chronic social stress (CSS) based rodent model for postpartum depression and anxiety. Since CSS attenuates maternal behavior and impairs both dam and offspring growth, it was hypothesized that CSS is an ethologically relevant form of early life stress for the developing female offspring and may have effects on subsequent adult maternal behavior and neuroendocrinology. Dams exposed to early life CSS as infants display substantial increases in pup retrieval and nursing behavior that are specifically associated with attenuated oxytocin, prolactin, and vasopressin gene expression in brain nuclei involved in the control of maternal behavior. Since the growth patterns of both groups were similar despite substantial increases in nursing duration, the early life CSS dams exhibited an attenuated nursing efficiency. It is concluded that early life CSS has long term effects on the neuroendocrinology of maternal care (oxytocin and prolactin) which results in decreased nursing efficiency in the adult dams. The data support the use of early life CSS as an effective model for stress-induced impairments in nursing, such as those associated with postpartum depression and anxiety.
PLOS ONE | 2009
Mirjam Bunck; Ludwig Czibere; Charlotte Horvath; Cornelia Graf; Elisabeth Frank; Melanie S. Keßler; Chris Murgatroyd; Bertram Müller-Myhsok; Mariya Gonik; Peter Weber; Benno Pütz; Patrik Muigg; Markus Panhuysen; Nicolas Singewald; Thomas Bettecken; Jan M. Deussing; Florian Holsboer; Dietmar Spengler; Rainer Landgraf
Background To investigate neurobiological correlates of trait anxiety, CD1 mice were selectively bred for extremes in anxiety-related behavior, with high (HAB) and low (LAB) anxiety-related behavior mice additionally differing in behavioral tests reflecting depression-like behavior. Methodology/ Principal Findings In this study, microarray analysis, in situ hybridization, quantitative real-time PCR and immunohistochemistry revealed decreased expression of the vasopressin gene (Avp) in the hypothalamic paraventricular (PVN) and supraoptic (SON) nuclei of adult LAB mice compared to HAB, NAB (normal anxiety-related behavior) and HABxLAB F1 intercross controls, without detecting differences in receptor expression or density. By sequencing the regions 2.5 kbp up- and downstream of the Avp gene locus, we could identify several polymorphic loci, differing between the HAB and LAB lines. In the gene promoter, a deletion of twelve bp Δ(−2180–2191) is particularly likely to contribute to the reduced Avp expression detected in LAB animals under basal conditions. Indeed, allele-specific transcription analysis of F1 animals revealed a hypomorphic LAB-specific Avp allele with a reduced transcription rate by 75% compared to the HAB-specific allele, thus explaining line-specific Avp expression profiles and phenotypic features. Accordingly, intra-PVN Avp mRNA levels were found to correlate with anxiety-related and depression-like behaviors. In addition to this correlative evidence, a significant, though moderate, genotype/phenotype association was demonstrated in 258 male mice of a freely-segregating F2 panel, suggesting a causal contribution of the Avp promoter deletion to anxiety-related behavior. Discussion Thus, the identification of polymorphisms in the Avp gene promoter explains gene expression differences in association with the observed phenotype, thus further strengthening the concept of the critical involvement of centrally released AVP in trait anxiety.
Translational Psychiatry | 2015
Chris Murgatroyd; John P. Quinn; Helen Sharp; Andrew Pickles; Jonathan Hill
In animal models, prenatal and postnatal stress is associated with elevated hypothalamic–pituitary axis (HPA) reactivity mediated via altered glucocorticoid receptor (GR) gene expression. Postnatal tactile stimulation is associated with reduced HPA reactivity mediated via increased GR gene expression. In this first study in humans to examine the joint effects of prenatal and postnatal environmental exposures, we report that GR gene (NR3C1) 1-F promoter methylation in infants is elevated in the presence of increased maternal postnatal depression following low prenatal depression, and that this effect is reversed by self-reported stroking of the infants by their mothers over the first weeks of life.
Clinical Epigenetics | 2015
Magdalene C. Jawahar; Chris Murgatroyd; Emma L. Harrison; Bernhard T. Baune
Stressor exposure during early life has the potential to increase an individual’s susceptibility to a number of neuropsychiatric conditions such as mood and anxiety disorders and schizophrenia in adulthood. This occurs in part due to the dysfunctional stress axis that persists following early adversity impairing stress responsivity across life. The mechanisms underlying the prolonged nature of this vulnerability remain to be established. Alterations in the epigenetic signature of genes involved in stress responsivity may represent one of the neurobiological mechanisms. The overall aim of this review is to provide current evidence demonstrating changes in the epigenetic signature of candidate gene(s) in response to early environmental adversity. More specifically, this review analyses the epigenetic signatures of postnatal adversity such as childhood abuse or maltreatment and later-life psychopathology in human and animal models of early life stress. The results of this review shows that focus to date has been on genes involved in the regulation of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and its correlation to subsequent neurobiology, for example, the role of glucocorticoid receptor gene. However, epigenetic changes in other candidate genes such as brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and serotonin transporter are also implicated in early life stress (ELS) and susceptibility to adult psychiatric disorders. DNA methylation is the predominantly studied epigenetic mark followed by histone modifications specifically acetylation and methylation. Further, these epigenetic changes are cell/tissue-specific in regulating expression of genes, providing potential biomarkers for understanding the trajectory of early stress-induced susceptibility to adult psychiatric disorders.