
Brief alcohol exposure alters transcription in astrocytes via the heat shock pathway
Author(s) -
Pignataro Leonardo,
Varodayan Florence P.,
Tannenholz Lindsay E.,
Protiva Petr,
Harrison Neil L.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
brain and behavior
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.915
H-Index - 41
ISSN - 2162-3279
DOI - 10.1002/brb3.125
Subject(s) - heat shock , heat shock factor , microbiology and biotechnology , transcription (linguistics) , transcription factor , alcohol , heat shock protein , hsf1 , chemistry , biology , genetics , hsp70 , biochemistry , gene , linguistics , philosophy
Astrocytes are critical for maintaining homeostasis in the central nervous system ( CNS ), and also participate in the genomic response of the brain to drugs of abuse, including alcohol. In this study, we investigated ethanol regulation of gene expression in astrocytes. A microarray screen revealed that a brief exposure of cortical astrocytes to ethanol increased the expression of a large number of genes. Among the alcohol‐responsive genes ( ARG s) are glial‐specific immune response genes, as well as genes involved in the regulation of transcription, cell proliferation, and differentiation, and genes of the cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix. Genes involved in metabolism were also upregulated by alcohol exposure, including genes associated with oxidoreductase activity, insulin‐like growth factor signaling, acetyl‐CoA, and lipid metabolism. Previous microarray studies performed on ethanol‐treated hepatocyte cultures and mouse liver tissue revealed the induction of almost identical classes of genes to those identified in our microarray experiments, suggesting that alcohol induces similar signaling mechanisms in the brain and liver. We found that acute ethanol exposure activated heat shock factor 1 ( HSF 1) in astrocytes, as demonstrated by the translocation of this transcription factor to the nucleus and the induction of a family of known HSF 1‐dependent genes, the heat shock proteins ( Hsps ). Transfection of a constitutively transcriptionally active Hsf1 construct into astrocytes induced many of the ARG s identified in our microarray study supporting the hypothesis that HSF 1 transcriptional activity, as part of the heat shock cascade, may mediate the ethanol induction of these genes. These data indicate that acute ethanol exposure alters gene expression in astrocytes, in part via the activation of HSF 1 and the heat shock cascade.