MicroRNA Regulation of the Environmental Impact on Adolescent Neurobehavioral Development: A Systematic Review
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Frontiers
Materia
Adolescence Alcohol Behavior Brain Drug Epigenetic microRNA Stress
Date
2022-07-22Referencia bibliográfica
Vázquez-Ágredos A, Gámiz F and Gallo M (2022) MicroRNA Regulation of the Environmental Impact on Adolescent Neurobehavioral Development: A Systematic Review. Front. Cell. Neurosci. 16:956609. doi: [10.3389/fncel.2022.956609]
Sponsorship
Spanish Government PID2020-114269GB-I00; FEDER, Junta de Andalucia, Spain BSEJ.514.UGR20; MIU, Spain FPU18/05012Abstract
Adolescence is a late developmental period marked by pronounced reorganization of
brain networks in which epigenetic mechanisms play a fundamental role. This brain
remodeling is associated with a peculiar behavior characterized by novelty seeking and
risky activities such as alcohol and drug abuse, which is associated with increased
susceptibility to stress. Hence, adolescence is a vulnerable postnatal period since
short- and long-term deleterious effects of alcohol drinking and drug abuse are a
serious worldwide public health concern. Among several other consequences, it has
been proposed that exposure to stress, alcohol, or other drugs disrupts epigenetic
mechanisms mediated by small non-coding microRNAs (miRNAs). During adolescence,
this modifies the expression of a variety of genes involved in neurodevelopmental
processes such as proliferation, differentiation, synaptogenesis, neural plasticity, and
apoptosis. Hence, the effect of miRNAs dysregulation during adolescence might
contribute to a long-term impact on brain function. This systematic review focuses on
the miRNA expression patterns in the adolescent rodent brain with special interest in
the impact of stress and drugs such as amphetamine, cocaine, nicotine, cannabis, and
ketamine. The results point to a relevant and complex role of miRNAs in the regulation of
the molecular processes involved in adolescent brain development as part of a dynamic
epigenetic network sensitive to environmental events with distinctive changes across
adolescence. Several miRNAs have been assessed evidencing changing expression
profiles during the adolescent transition which are altered by exposure to stress and drug
abuse. Since this is an emerging rapidly growing field, updating the present knowledge
will contribute to improving our understanding of the epigenetic regulation mechanisms
involved in the neurodevelopmental changes responsible for adolescent behavior. It can
be expected that increased knowledge of themolecularmechanismsmediating the effect
of environmental threats during the adolescent critical developmental period will improve
understanding of psychiatric and addictive disorders emerging at this stage.