Orna Issler
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
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Featured researches published by Orna Issler.
Science | 2017
Catherine J. Peña; Hope Kronman; Deena M. Walker; Hannah M. Cates; Rosemary C. Bagot; Immanuel Purushothaman; Orna Issler; Yong-Hwee Eddie Loh; Tin Leong; Drew D. Kiraly; Emma Goodman; Rachael L. Neve; Li Shen; Eric J. Nestler
An early window of stress susceptibility defines a mouse’s response to stress in adulthood. Early life stress in depression susceptibility The linkage between stress early in life and behavioral depression in adulthood is complex. Peña et al. were able to define a time period in early development when mice are especially susceptible to stress. Mice subjected to stress during this time period were less resilient to stress in adulthood. Genes regulated by the transcription factor orthodenticle homeobox 2 (OTX2) primed the response toward depression in adulthood. Although early stress could establish the groundwork for later depression, that priming could be undone by intervention at the right moment. Science, this issue p. 1185 Early life stress increases risk for depression. Here we establish a “two-hit” stress model in mice wherein stress at a specific postnatal period increases susceptibility to adult social defeat stress and causes long-lasting transcriptional alterations that prime the ventral tegmental area (VTA)—a brain reward region—to be in a depression-like state. We identify a role for the developmental transcription factor orthodenticle homeobox 2 (Otx2) as an upstream mediator of these enduring effects. Transient juvenile—but not adult—knockdown of Otx2 in VTA mimics early life stress by increasing stress susceptibility, whereas its overexpression reverses the effects of early life stress. This work establishes a mechanism by which early life stress encodes lifelong susceptibility to stress via long-lasting transcriptional programming in VTA mediated by Otx2.
Nature Medicine | 2017
Benoit Labonté; Olivia Engmann; Immanuel Purushothaman; Caroline Ménard; Junshi Wang; Chunfeng Tan; Joseph R. Scarpa; Gregory Moy; Yong-Hwee Eddie Loh; Michael E. Cahill; Zachary S. Lorsch; Peter J. Hamilton; Erin S. Calipari; Georgia E. Hodes; Orna Issler; Hope Kronman; Madeline L. Pfau; Aleksandar Obradovic; Yan Dong; Rachael L. Neve; Scott J. Russo; Andrew Kazarskis; Carol A. Tamminga; Naguib Mechawar; Gustavo Turecki; Bin Zhang; Li Shen; Eric J. Nestler
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a leading cause of disease burden worldwide. While the incidence, symptoms and treatment of MDD all point toward major sex differences, the molecular mechanisms underlying this sexual dimorphism remain largely unknown. Here, combining differential expression and gene coexpression network analyses, we provide a comprehensive characterization of male and female transcriptional profiles associated with MDD across six brain regions. We overlap our human profiles with those from a mouse model, chronic variable stress, and capitalize on converging pathways to define molecular and physiological mechanisms underlying the expression of stress susceptibility in males and females. Our results show a major rearrangement of transcriptional patterns in MDD, with limited overlap between males and females, an effect seen in both depressed humans and stressed mice. We identify key regulators of sex-specific gene networks underlying MDD and confirm their sex-specific impact as mediators of stress susceptibility. For example, downregulation of the female-specific hub gene Dusp6 in mouse prefrontal cortex mimicked stress susceptibility in females, but not males, by increasing ERK signaling and pyramidal neuron excitability. Such Dusp6 downregulation also recapitulated the transcriptional remodeling that occurs in prefrontal cortex of depressed females. Together our findings reveal marked sexual dimorphism at the transcriptional level in MDD and highlight the importance of studying sex-specific treatments for this disorder.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Drew D. Kiraly; Deena M. Walker; Erin S. Calipari; Benoit Labonté; Orna Issler; Catherine J. Peña; Efrain Ribeiro; Scott J. Russo; Eric J. Nestler
Addiction to cocaine and other psychostimulants represents a major public health crisis. The development and persistence of addictive behaviors comes from a complex interaction of genes and environment - the precise mechanisms of which remain elusive. In recent years a surge of evidence has suggested that the gut microbiome can have tremendous impact on behavioral via the microbiota-gut-brain axis. In this study we characterized the influence of the gut microbiota on cocaine-mediated behaviors. Groups of mice were treated with a prolonged course of non-absorbable antibiotics via the drinking water, which resulted in a substantial reduction of gut bacteria. Animals with reduced gut bacteria showed an enhanced sensitivity to cocaine reward and enhanced sensitivity to the locomotor-sensitizing effects of repeated cocaine administration. These behavioral changes were correlated with adaptations in multiple transcripts encoding important synaptic proteins in the brain’s reward circuitry. This study represents the first evidence that alterations in the gut microbiota affect behavioral response to drugs of abuse.
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2017
Jian Feng; Catherine J. Peña; Immanuel Purushothaman; Olivia Engmann; Deena M. Walker; Amber N. Brown; Orna Issler; Marie Doyle; Eileen Harrigan; Ezekiell Mouzon; Vincent Vialou; Li Shen; Meelad M. Dawlaty; Rudolf Jaenisch; Eric J. Nestler
Depression is a leading cause of disease burden, yet current therapies fully treat <50% of affected individuals. Increasing evidence implicates epigenetic mechanisms in depression and antidepressant action. Here we examined a possible role for the DNA dioxygenase, ten-eleven translocation protein 1 (TET1), in depression-related behavioral abnormalities. We applied chronic social defeat stress, an ethologically validated mouse model of depression-like behaviors, and examined Tet1 expression changes in nucleus accumbens (NAc), a key brain reward region. We show decreased Tet1 expression in NAc in stress-susceptible mice only. Surprisingly, selective knockout of Tet1 in NAc neurons of adult mice produced antidepressant-like effects in several behavioral assays. To identify Tet1 targets that mediate these actions, we performed RNAseq on NAc after conditional deletion of Tet1 and found that immune-related genes are the most highly dysregulated. Moreover, many of these genes are also upregulated in the NAc of resilient mice after chronic social defeat stress. These findings reveal a novel role for TET1, an enzyme important for DNA hydroxymethylation, in the brains reward circuitry in modulating stress responses in mice. We also identify a subset of genes that are regulated by TET1 in this circuitry. These findings provide new insight into the pathophysiology of depression, which can aid in future antidepressant drug discovery efforts.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Ashley E. Lepack; Rosemary C. Bagot; Catherine J. Peña; Yong-Hwee Eddie Loh; Lorna Farrelly; Yang Lu; Samuel K. Powell; Zachary S. Lorsch; Orna Issler; Hannah M. Cates; Carol A. Tamminga; Henrik Molina; Li Shen; Eric J. Nestler; C. David Allis; Ian Maze
Significance Human major depressive disorder is a chronic remitting syndrome that affects millions of individuals worldwide; however, the molecular mechanisms mediating this syndrome remain elusive. Here, using a unique combination of epigenome-wide and behavioral analyses, we demonstrate a role for histone variant dynamics in the nucleus accumbens (NAc)—a critical brain center of reward and mood—contributing to stress susceptibility in mice. These studies, which also demonstrate that molecular blockade of aberrant dynamics in the NAc promotes resilience to chronic stress, promise to aid in the identification of novel molecular targets (i.e., downstream genes displaying altered expression as the result of stress-induced histone dynamics) that may be exploited in the development of more effective pharmacotherapeutics. Human major depressive disorder (MDD), along with related mood disorders, is among the world’s greatest public health concerns; however, its pathophysiology remains poorly understood. Persistent changes in gene expression are known to promote physiological aberrations implicated in MDD. More recently, histone mechanisms affecting cell type- and regional-specific chromatin structures have also been shown to contribute to transcriptional programs related to depressive behaviors, as well as responses to antidepressants. Although much emphasis has been placed in recent years on roles for histone posttranslational modifications and chromatin-remodeling events in the etiology of MDD, it has become increasingly clear that replication-independent histone variants (e.g., H3.3), which differ in primary amino acid sequence from their canonical counterparts, similarly play critical roles in the regulation of activity-dependent neuronal transcription, synaptic connectivity, and behavioral plasticity. Here, we demonstrate a role for increased H3.3 dynamics in the nucleus accumbens (NAc)—a key limbic brain reward region—in the regulation of aberrant social stress-mediated gene expression and the precipitation of depressive-like behaviors in mice. We find that molecular blockade of these dynamics promotes resilience to chronic social stress and results in a partial renormalization of stress-associated transcriptional patterns in the NAc. In sum, our findings establish H3.3 dynamics as a critical, and previously undocumented, regulator of mood and suggest that future therapies aimed at modulating striatal histone dynamics may potentiate beneficial behavioral adaptations to negative emotional stimuli.
Nature Communications | 2018
Zachary S. Lorsch; Yong-Hwee Eddie Loh; Immanuel Purushothaman; Deena M. Walker; Eric M. Parise; Marine Salery; Michael E. Cahill; Georgia E. Hodes; Madeline L. Pfau; Hope Kronman; Peter J. Hamilton; Orna Issler; Benoit Labonté; Ann E. Symonds; Matthew Zucker; Tie-Yuan Zhang; Michael J. Meaney; Scott J. Russo; Li Shen; Rosemary C. Bagot; Eric J. Nestler
Most people exposed to stress do not develop depression. Animal models have shown that stress resilience is an active state that requires broad transcriptional adaptations, but how this homeostatic process is regulated remains poorly understood. In this study, we analyze upstream regulators of genes differentially expressed after chronic social defeat stress. We identify estrogen receptor α (ERα) as the top regulator of pro-resilient transcriptional changes in the nucleus accumbens (NAc), a key brain reward region implicated in depression. In accordance with these findings, nuclear ERα protein levels are altered by stress in male and female mice. Further, overexpression of ERα in the NAc promotes stress resilience in both sexes. Subsequent RNA-sequencing reveals that ERα overexpression in NAc reproduces the transcriptional signature of resilience in male, but not female, mice. These results indicate that NAc ERα is an important regulator of pro-resilient transcriptional changes, but with sex-specific downstream targets.Stress resilience is accompanied by broad changes in gene expression. This study shows that estrogen receptor α (ERα) is a key upstream regulator of these changes in the nucleus accumbens, and that overexpression of ERα increases behavioral resilience via a sex-specific transcriptional mechanism.
bioRxiv | 2018
Zachary S. Lorsch; Peter J. Hamilton; Aarthi Ramakrishnan; Eric M. Parise; William J Wright; Marine Salery; Ashley E. Lepack; Philipp Mews; Orna Issler; Andrew McKenzie; Xianxiao Zhou; Lyonna F Parise; Stephen T. Pirpinias; Idelisse Ortiz Torres; Sarah Montgomery; Yong-Hwee Eddie Loh; Benoit Labonté; Andrew Conkey; Ann E. Symonds; Rachael L. Neve; Gustavo Turecki; Ian Maze; Yan Dong; Bin Zhang; Li Shen; Rosemary C. Bagot; Eric J. Nestler
Stress resilience involves numerous brain-wide transcriptional changes. Determining the organization and orchestration of these transcriptional events may reveal novel antidepressant targets, but this remains unexplored. Here, we characterize the resilient transcriptome with co-expression analysis and identify a single transcriptionally-active uniquely-resilient gene network. Zfp189, a previously unstudied zinc finger protein, is the top network key driver and its overexpression in prefrontal cortical (PFC) neurons preferentially activates this network, alters neuronal activity and promotes behavioral resilience. CREB, which binds Zfp189, is the top upstream regulator of this network. To probe CREB-Zfp189 interactions as a network regulatory mechanism, we employ CRISPR-mediated locus-specific transcriptional reprogramming to direct CREB selectively to the Zfp189 promoter. This single molecular interaction in PFC neurons recapitulates the pro-resilient Zfp189-dependent downstream effects on gene network activity, electrophysiology and behavior. These findings reveal an essential role for Zfp189 and a CREB-Zfp189 regulatory axis in mediating a central transcriptional network of resilience.
Current opinion in behavioral sciences | 2018
Orna Issler; Eric J. Nestler
Depression is a prevalent, devastating psychiatric disorder which women are twice as likely to suffer as men. Yet, until recently, most of the mechanistic studies shedding light on the molecular pathways involved in depression have focused on males, both animals and humans. It has been established that women have a more sensitive stress response, and that sex hormones contribute to depression onset. Recent genome-wide studies on human and mouse brain tissue have revealed that the overlap in the genes regulated by depression or chronic stress, respectively, between the sexes is surprisingly low. Such unbiased comprehensive screening approaches combined with advanced bioinformatics and in vivo validation studies enable identifying truly novel target genes that contribute to sex differences in depression susceptibility. Furthermore, recent studies have demonstrated sex bias in transgenerational passage of the effects of stress to the offspring. Elucidating the sex-specific mechanisms contributing to the development of depression can help design better diagnostic and therapeutic tools aimed at normalizing the unique abnormalities of each gender.
Neuron | 2016
Rosemary C. Bagot; Hannah M. Cates; Immanuel Purushothaman; Zachary S. Lorsch; Deena M. Walker; Junshi Wang; Xiaojie Huang; Oliver M. Schlüter; Ian Maze; Catherine J. Peña; Elizabeth A. Heller; Orna Issler; Minghui Wang; Won-Min Song; Jason L. Stein; Xiaochuan Liu; Marie Doyle; Kimberly N. Scobie; Hao Sheng Sun; Rachael L. Neve; Daniel H. Geschwind; Yan Dong; Li Shen; Bin Zhang; Eric J. Nestler
Biological Psychiatry | 2017
Olivia Engmann; Benoit Labonté; Amanda C. Mitchell; Pavel Bashtrykov; Erin S. Calipari; Chaggai Rosenbluh; Yong-Hwee Eddie Loh; Deena M. Walker; Dominika Burek; Peter J. Hamilton; Orna Issler; Rachael L. Neve; Gustavo Turecki; Yasmin L. Hurd; Andrew Chess; Li Shen; Isabelle M. Mansuy; Albert Jeltsch; Schahram Akbarian; Eric J. Nestler