TY - JOUR
T1 - Alcohol metabolism contributes to brain histone acetylation
AU - Mews, P.
AU - Egervari, G.
AU - Nativio, R.
AU - Sidoli, S.
AU - Donahue, G.
AU - Lombroso, S. I.
AU - Alexander, D. C.
AU - Riesche, S. L.
AU - Heller, E. A.
AU - Nestler, E. J.
AU - Garcia, B. A.
AU - Berger, S. L.
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgements We thank the Metabolomics Core of the Diabetes Research Center (DRC) for providing the mass spectrometry quantification of metabolites; J. D. Rabinowitz (the Princeton Metabolomics Core director) and C. Jang for advice; and the Neurons R Us core of the Mahoney Institute for Neurological Sciences for preparations of primary hippocampal neurons. We especially acknowledge J. Whetstine for the suggestion to test whether the administration of alcohol to a pregnant female mouse leads to histone acetylation in the gestating fetal brain. G.E. was supported by The Brody Family Medical Trust Fund Fellowship in Incurable Diseases of The Philadelphia Foundation. This work was supported by NIH P01AG031862 and NIH R01AA027202.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.
PY - 2019/10/31
Y1 - 2019/10/31
N2 - Emerging evidence suggests that epigenetic regulation is dependent on metabolic state, and implicates specific metabolic factors in neural functions that drive behaviour1. In neurons, acetylation of histones relies on the metabolite acetyl-CoA, which is produced from acetate by chromatin-bound acetyl-CoA synthetase 2 (ACSS2)2. Notably, the breakdown of alcohol in the liver leads to a rapid increase in levels of blood acetate3, and alcohol is therefore a major source of acetate in the body. Histone acetylation in neurons may thus be under the influence of acetate that is derived from alcohol4, with potential effects on alcohol-induced gene expression in the brain, and on behaviour5. Here, using in vivo stable-isotope labelling in mice, we show that the metabolism of alcohol contributes to rapid acetylation of histones in the brain, and that this occurs in part through the direct deposition of acetyl groups that are derived from alcohol onto histones in an ACSS2-dependent manner. A similar direct deposition was observed when mice were injected with heavy-labelled acetate in vivo. In a pregnant mouse, exposure to labelled alcohol resulted in the incorporation of labelled acetyl groups into gestating fetal brains. In isolated primary hippocampal neurons ex vivo, extracellular acetate induced transcriptional programs related to learning and memory, which were sensitive to ACSS2 inhibition. We show that alcohol-related associative learning requires ACSS2 in vivo. These findings suggest that there is a direct link between alcohol metabolism and gene regulation, through the ACSS2-dependent acetylation of histones in the brain.
AB - Emerging evidence suggests that epigenetic regulation is dependent on metabolic state, and implicates specific metabolic factors in neural functions that drive behaviour1. In neurons, acetylation of histones relies on the metabolite acetyl-CoA, which is produced from acetate by chromatin-bound acetyl-CoA synthetase 2 (ACSS2)2. Notably, the breakdown of alcohol in the liver leads to a rapid increase in levels of blood acetate3, and alcohol is therefore a major source of acetate in the body. Histone acetylation in neurons may thus be under the influence of acetate that is derived from alcohol4, with potential effects on alcohol-induced gene expression in the brain, and on behaviour5. Here, using in vivo stable-isotope labelling in mice, we show that the metabolism of alcohol contributes to rapid acetylation of histones in the brain, and that this occurs in part through the direct deposition of acetyl groups that are derived from alcohol onto histones in an ACSS2-dependent manner. A similar direct deposition was observed when mice were injected with heavy-labelled acetate in vivo. In a pregnant mouse, exposure to labelled alcohol resulted in the incorporation of labelled acetyl groups into gestating fetal brains. In isolated primary hippocampal neurons ex vivo, extracellular acetate induced transcriptional programs related to learning and memory, which were sensitive to ACSS2 inhibition. We show that alcohol-related associative learning requires ACSS2 in vivo. These findings suggest that there is a direct link between alcohol metabolism and gene regulation, through the ACSS2-dependent acetylation of histones in the brain.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85074227228&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/s41586-019-1700-7
DO - 10.1038/s41586-019-1700-7
M3 - Article
C2 - 31645761
AN - SCOPUS:85074227228
SN - 0028-0836
VL - 574
SP - 717
EP - 721
JO - Nature
JF - Nature
IS - 7780
ER -