Mineralocorticoid and glucocorticoid receptor heterodimers mediate cortisol-induced behavioural changes via modulation of glutamatergic signalling
Erin Faught, Valentina Canino Avilés, Marcel JM Schaaf

TL;DR
This study shows that cortisol causes behavioral changes by forming MR/GR heterodimers that affect glutamate signaling in zebrafish.
Contribution
The study demonstrates the physiological role of MR/GR heterodimers in stress-induced behavior via glutamatergic signaling.
Findings
Cortisol-induced hyperactivity occurs only with MR/GR heterodimerization.
MR/GR heterodimers regulate genes involved in glutamatergic signaling.
Editing a glutamate receptor gene abolishes cortisol-induced hyperactivity.
Abstract
Stress is both an underlying and exacerbating factor in a wide range of neuropsychiatric disorders, from anxiety to major depressive disorder. Such stress-related behaviours are thought to be modulated, in part, by the receptors for the stress hormone cortisol. These receptors, namely the mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) and glucocorticoid receptor (GR), are highly conserved transcription factors that bind as homodimers to response elements in target genes. Although it has been shown that MR and GR can act as heterodimers as well, little is known regarding the physiological relevance of MR/GR heterodimerization. Here we tested the hypothesis that MR/GR heterodimerization is essential to mediate the behavioural effects of cortisol. For this purpose, we established mutant MRs and GRs that could selectively homo- or heterodimerize and expressed these receptors in zebrafish from an MR/GR…
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Taxonomy
TopicsZebrafish Biomedical Research Applications · Stress Responses and Cortisol · Estrogen and related hormone effects
