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Volume 17, Number 11,
Issue of June 1, 1997
pp. 4056-4065
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Dysregulation of Diurnal Rhythms of Serotonin 5-HT2C
and Corticosteroid Receptor Gene Expression in the Hippocampus with
Food Restriction and Glucocorticoids
Received Dec. 4, 1996; revised Feb. 27, 1997; accepted March 12, 1997.
Megan C. Holmes,
Karen L. French, and
Jonathan R. Seckl
Molecular Endocrine Laboratory, Molecular Medicine Centre,
University of Edinburgh, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh EH4 2XU,
Scotland, United Kingdom
Both serotonergic dysfunction and glucocorticoid hypersecretion are
implicated in affective and eating disorders. The adverse effects of
serotonergic (5-HT)2C receptor activation on mood and food
intake, the antidepressant efficacy of 5-HT2 receptor
antagonists, and the hyperphagia observed in 5-HT2C
receptor knockout mice all suggest a key role for increased
5-HT2C receptor-mediated neurotransmission.
Glucocorticoids, however, downregulate 5-HT2C receptor mRNA in the hippocampus, and it is unclear how increased 5-HT2C receptor sensitivity is achieved in the presence of
elevated glucocorticoid levels in depression. Here we show a monophasic diurnal rhythm of 5-HT2C receptor mRNA expression in the
rat hippocampus that parallels time-dependent variations in
5-HT2C receptor agonist-induced behaviors in open field
tests. Rats entrained to chronic food restriction show marked but
intermittent corticosterone hypersecretion and maintain an unaltered
5-HT2C receptor mRNA rhythm. The 5-HT2C receptor mRNA rhythm, however, is suppressed by even modest constant elevations of corticosterone (adrenalectomy + pellet) or with elevated
corticosterone during the daytime (8 A.M.), whereas a normal rhythm
exists in animals that have the same dose of corticosterone in the
evening (6 P.M.). Thus, animals showing even a transient daytime
corticosterone nadir exhibit normal hippocampal 5-HT2C receptor mRNA rhythms, even in the presence of overt corticosterone hypersecretion. Chronic food restriction also abolishes the normal diurnal variation in hippocampal glucocorticoid receptor (GR) and
mineralocorticoid receptor mRNAs and produces, unusually, both elevated
corticosterone and increased GR. The mismatch between elevated
glucocorticoids and maintained 5-HT2C receptor and
increased GR gene expression in the hippocampus provides a new model to dissect mechanisms that may underlie affective and eating
disorders.
Key words:
5-HT2C receptor;
serotonin;
corticosterone;
diurnal rhythm;
food restriction;
depression;
5-HT1A
receptor;
glucocorticoid receptor;
mineralocorticoid receptor
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