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Valproic Acid Induces Telomerase Reverse Transcriptase Expression During Cortical Development.open access

Authors
Kim, Ki ChanChoi, Chang SoonGonzales, Edson Luck T.Mabunga, Darine Froy NLee, Sung HoonJeon, Se JinHwangbo, RamHong, MinhaRyu, Jong HoonHan, Seol-HeuiBahn, Geon HoShin, Chan Young
Issue Date
Oct-2017
Publisher
Korean Society for Brain and Neural Science
Keywords
telomerase reverse transcriptase; valproic acid; autism; excitatory/inhibitory imbalance; glutamatergic neuronal differentiation
Citation
Experimental Neurobiology, v.26, no.5, pp.252 - 265
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
Experimental Neurobiology
Volume
26
Number
5
Start Page
252
End Page
265
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/151427
DOI
10.5607/en.2017.26.5.252
ISSN
1226-2560
Abstract
The valproic acid (VPA)-induced animal model is one of the most widely utilized environmental risk factor models of autism. Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) remains an insurmountable challenge among neurodevelopmental disorders due to its heterogeneity, unresolved pathological pathways and lack of treatment. We previously reported that VPA-exposed rats and cultured rat primary neurons have increased Pax6 expression during post-midterm embryonic development which led to the sequential upregulation of glutamatergic neuronal markers. In this study, we provide experimental evidence that telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT), a protein component of ribonucleoproteins complex of telomerase, is involved in the abnormal components caused by VPA in addition to Pax6 and its downstream signals. In embryonic rat brains and cultured rat primary neural progenitor cells (NPCs), VPA induced the increased expression of TERT as revealed by Western blot, RT-PCR, and immunostainings. The HDAC inhibitor property of VPA is responsible for the TERT upregulation. Chromatin immunoprecipitation revealed that VPA increased the histone acetylation but blocked the HDAC1 binding to both Pax6 and Tert genes. Interestingly, the VPA-induced TERT overexpression resulted to sequential upregulations of glutamatergic markers such as Ngn2 and NeuroD1, and inter-synaptic markers such as PSD- 95, a-CaMKII, vGluT1 and synaptophysin. Transfection of Tert siRNA reversed the effects of VPA in cultured NPCs confirming the direct involvement of TERT in the expression of those markers. This study suggests the involvement of TERT in the VPA-induced autistic phenotypes and has important implications for the role of TERT as a modulator of balanced neuronal development and transmission in the brain.
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