Abstract
Early-life stress sensitizes individuals to subsequent stressors to increase lifetime risk for psychiatric disorders. Within the ventral tegmental area (VTA), a mesolimbic brain region implicated in stress response and mental health, early-life stress causes long-lasting changes in gene expression and chromatin modifications that in turn cause latent physiological and behavioral sensitivity to stress. These molecular consequences of early-life stress are indicative of epigenetic priming, a form of molecular memory in which developmental or environmental cues open chromatin at enhancers to facilitate transcriptional response to stimuli. However, the long term impact of early-life stress on chromatin architecture in the VTA was not yet known. Using a combination of activity-dependent cellular tagging and ATAC-sequencing, we find that early-life stress opens chromatin specifically in stress-activated cells of the VTA, that this remodeling persists into adulthood, and that opening chromatin at cis-regulatory elements including enhancers augments transcriptional response to adult stress. Together, this data supports enhancer priming within ELS-responsive cells in the VTA as a biological mechanism for lifelong stress sensitivity.
| Original language | English (US) |
|---|---|
| Article number | 36118 |
| Journal | Scientific reports |
| Volume | 15 |
| Issue number | 1 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Dec 2025 |
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- General
Keywords
- ATAC-seq
- Activity-dependent genetic labeling (TRAP)
- Early life stress
- Epigenetic priming
- Epigenetics
- Ventral tegmental area
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