The striatal heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein H mRNA targetome associated with methamphetamine administration and behavior.

与甲基苯丙胺给药和行为相关的纹状体异质核糖核蛋白H mRNA靶组

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Methamphetamine addiction remains a major public health concern in the United States that has paralleled the opioid epidemic. Psychostimulant use disorders have a heritable genetic component that remains unexplained. Methamphetamine targets membrane and vesicular transporters to increase synaptic dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin. We previously identified Hnrnph1 (heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein H1) as a quantitative trait gene underlying methamphetamine behavioral sensitivity. Hnrnph1 encodes the RNA-binding protein hnRNP H1 that is ubiquitously expressed in neurons throughout the brain. Gene-edited mice with a heterozygous frameshift deletion in Hnrnph1's first coding exon of showed reduced methamphetamine-induced dopamine release and behaviors. To inform the mechanism linking hnRNP H with methamphetamine neurobehavioral effects, we surveyed the mRNA targetome of hnRNP H via cross-linking immunoprecipitation coupled with RNA-sequencing in striatal tissue at baseline and at 30 min post-methamphetamine in wild-type male and female C57BL/6J mice. Methamphetamine induced changes in RNA-binding targets of hnRNP H in mice, including differential binding to 3'UTR targets and multiple enriched mRNAs involved in synaptic plasticity. Targetome, transcriptome, and spliceome analyses triangulated on Cacna2d2 as a suggestive target, with differences in hnRNP H binding, gene expression and splicing following methamphetamine treatment (2 mg/kg, i.p.). Furthermore, pre-treatment with pregabalin, an inhibitor of α2δ2 and α2δ1 voltage-gated calcium channel subunits, attenuated methamphetamine-induced locomotor activity in male and female mice, supporting a role for Cacna2d1/d2 in methamphetamine locomotor stimulant sensitivity. Our study identifies a dynamic hnRNP H RNA targetome that can rapidly and adaptively respond to methamphetamine to regulate gene expression and likely synaptic plasticity and behavior.

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