Circadian glucocorticoid oscillations preserve a population of adult hippocampal neural stem cells in the aging brain
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Date
2019-06-20Author
Schouten, Marijn
Bielefeld, Pascal
García Corzo, L.
Passchier, E. M. J.
Gradari, S.
Jungenitz, T.
Pons Espinal, M.
Gebara, E.
Martín Suárez, Soraya
Lucassen, Paul J.
De Vries, H. E.
Trejo Pérez, Jose Luis
Schwarzacher, S. W.
De Pietri Tonelli, D.
Toni, N.
Mira, H.
Encinas Pérez, Juan Manuel
Fitzsimons, Carlos P.
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Molecular Psychiatry 2019 : 1-24 (2019)
Abstract
A decrease in adult hippocampal neurogenesis has been linked to age-related cognitive impairment. However, the mechanisms involved in this age-related reduction remain elusive. Glucocorticoid hormones (GC) are important regulators of neural stem/precursor cells (NSPC) proliferation. GC are released from the adrenal glands in ultradian secretory pulses that generate characteristic circadian oscillations. Here, we investigated the hypothesis that GC oscillations prevent NSPC activation and preserve a quiescent NSPC pool in the aging hippocampus. We found that hippocampal NSPC populations lacking expression of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) decayed exponentially with age, while GR-positive populations decayed linearly and predominated in the hippocampus from middle age onwards. Importantly, GC oscillations controlled NSPC activation and GR knockdown reactivated NSPC proliferation in aged mice. When modeled in primary hippocampal NSPC cultures, GC oscillations control cell cycle progression and induce specific genome-wide DNA methylation profiles. GC oscillations induced lasting changes in the methylation state of a group of gene promoters associated with cell cycle regulation and the canonical Wnt signaling pathway. Finally, in a mouse model of accelerated aging, we show that disruption of GC oscillations induces lasting changes in dendritic complexity, spine numbers and morphology of newborn granule neurons. Together, these results indicate that GC oscillations preserve a population of GR-expressing NSPC during aging, preventing their activation possibly by epigenetic programming through methylation of specific gene promoters. Our observations suggest a novel mechanism mediated by GC that controls NSPC proliferation and preserves a dormant NSPC pool, possibly contributing to a neuroplasticity reserve in the aging brain.