Abstract
Lithium responsivity in patients with bipolar disorder has been genetically associated with Phosphodiesterase 11A (PDE11A), and lithium decreases PDE11A mRNA in induced pluripotent stem cell-derived hippocampal neurons originating from lithium-responsive patients. PDE11 is an enzyme uniquely enriched in the hippocampus that breaks down cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP. Here we determined whether decreasing PDE11A expression is sufficient to increase lithium responsivity in mice. In dorsal hippocampus and ventral hippocampus (VHIPP), lithium-responsive C57BL/6J and 129S6/SvEvTac mice show decreased PDE11A4 protein expression relative to lithium-unresponsive BALB/cJ mice. In VHIPP, C57BL/6J mice also show differences in PDE11A4 compartmentalization relative to BALB/cJ mice. In contrast, neither PDE2A nor PDE10A expression differ among the strains. The compartment-specific differences in PDE11A4 protein expression are explained by a coding single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) at amino acid 499, which falls within the GAF-B homodimerization domain. Relative to the BALB/cJ 499T, the C57BL/6J 499A decreases PDE11A4 homodimerization, which removes PDE11A4 from the membrane. Consistent with the observation that lower PDE11A4 expression correlates with better lithium responsiveness, we found that Pde11a knockout mice (KO) given 0.4% lithium chow for 3+ weeks exhibit greater lithium responsivity relative to wild-type (WT) littermates in tail suspension, an antidepressant-predictive assay, and amphetamine hyperlocomotion, an anti-manic predictive assay. Reduced PDE11A4 expression may represent a lithium-sensitive pathophysiology, because both C57BL/6J and Pde11a KO mice show increased expression of the pro-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-6 (IL-6) relative to BALB/cJ and PDE11A WT mice, respectively. Our finding that PDE11A4 negatively regulates lithium responsivity in mice suggests that the PDE11A SNPs identified in patients may be functionally relevant.
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Introduction
Lithium is argued to be the best treatment option for patients with bipolar disorder, but it has a narrow therapeutic window due to significant side effect liability.1 If we could selectively augment the beneficial mood stabilizing effects of lithium in the brain without increasing its harmful peripheral side effects, we might be able to improve the safety margin of lithium treatment for patients with bipolar disorder because mood stabilization could be achieved with systemically lower doses. One way to achieve this selective augmentation of lithium’s positive effects is to target a molecule that is selectively expressed in the brain.
Phosphodiesterase 11A (PDE11A) hydrolyzes cyclic AMP (cAMP) and cyclic GMP (cGMP) equally well2, 3 and is the only PDE to be preferentially expressed in the hippocampus.4, 5, 6 We have shown in rodents that PDE11A4, the longest PDE11A isoform, is almost exclusively expressed in CA1 and subiculum of the ventral hippocampus (VHIPP), with minimal expression in the dorsal HIPP (DHIPP)4, 6 and little to no protein expression outside of the brain.5 Genetic findings in humans suggest a role for PDE11A in brain function7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 (but see Laje et al.,13 Perlis et al.14). For example, PDE11A single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have been associated with major depression and antidepressant response7, 8, 9 (but see Laje et al.,13 Perlis et al.14). Of particular interest to the present study, PDE11A SNPs have been associated with lithium responsiveness in patients with bipolar disorder,10, 11 a PDE11A inactivating mutation has been associated with increased suicide risk12—a symptom lithium uniquely reduces in patients with bipolar disorder,15 and lithium decreases PDE11A mRNA expression in induced Pluripotent Stem Cell (iPSC)-derived hippocampal neurons originating from lithium-responsive patients but not from lithium-unresponsive patients.16
A relationship between lithium and cyclic nucleotide signaling is well precedented. Lithium is known to modulate cyclic nucleotide signaling (cf., Gould et al.17), and disturbances in cyclic nucleotide signaling have repeatedly been observed in patients with bipolar disorder (for example, refs 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26). Interestingly, the alterations in cyclic nucleotide signaling identified in patients with bipolar disorder can be subcellular compartment specific,18, 23, 25 as can be the effects of lithium on cyclic nucleotide signaling.27, 28, 29 Therefore, we determined whether PDE11A expression and/or compartmentalization differ between mouse strains that respond well versus poorly to lithium. Furthermore, we determined whether differences in PDE11A compartmentalization are due to a non-synonymous coding SNP that exists between mouse strains at amino acid 499, which is positioned within the GAF-B homodimerization domain. We also established whether decreasing PDE11A expression is sufficient to strengthen the antidepressant-like effects of lithium in the tail suspension test (TST) and the anti-manic-like effects of lithium in amphetamine-stimulated hyperactivity by testing Pde11a wild-type (WT) and knockout (KO) mice. Finally, we determined whether PDE11A controls protein expression of the pro-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-6 (IL-6), a potential mood disorder biomarker,30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37 to clarify whether PDE11A holds promise as a possible target for adjuvant treatment or simply as a patient selection marker.
Materials and methods
Subjects
C57BL/6J (The Jackson Laboratories (JAX); Bar Harbor, ME, USA), BALB/cJ (JAX) and 129S6/SvEvTac mice (Taconic, Hudson, NY, USA) were ordered in at 10–12 weeks or bred onsite. All C57BL/6J, BALB/cJ and 129S6/SvEvTac mice were group housed and habituated to the colony at least 1 week prior to killing. mRNA analyses and protein analyses of the whole hippocampus using these strains were conducted on cohorts of all males; however, protein analyses on DHIPP vs VHIPP were conducted on mixed cohorts of males and females (cohort used in Figures 1d–g and Supplementary Figure S3=50% female; cohort used in Figure 2, Figures 5a–c, and Supplementary Figures S2C–F=25% female). Pde11a KO mice were originally developed by Deltagen (San Mateo, CA, USA), and are maintained on a mixed C57BL/6J-C57BL/6N-129S6/SvEvTac background, as previously described.6 Pde11a mice used in behavioral experiments were bred at JAX in heterozygous (HT) × HT matings, with same-sex WT, HT and KO littermates weaned together and shipped onsite at 8-12 weeks old. No more than 2 sets of sex-matched littermates (that is, a WT, HT, KO trio) came from the same litter. Upon delivery, Cohort1 was single housed for consistency with previous reports6 and was tested in TST and then amphetamine-stimulated locomotor activity. Cohort2 remained group housed and was tested only in TST. Pde11a mice used in biochemical studies were bred onsite at University of South Carolina in HT × HT matings and were weaned and group housed as described above. In all KO studies, approximately equal numbers of males and females were used. Animals were housed on a 12:12 light:dark cycle and allowed ad libitium access to food and water. See Figure Legends for n’s. Sample sizes were selected based on previous experiences with these assays. Experiments were carried out in accordance with the National Institutes of Health Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (Pub 85–23, revised 1996) and were fully approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committees of the University of South Carolina and Pfizer.
Protein sample preparation
Animals were killed by cervical dislocation and brain regions immediately dissected onto dry ice and stored at −80 °C. As previously described,4 tissue samples and cell lysates were homogenized in ice-cold lysis buffer (20 mm Tris-HCl, pH 7.5; 2 mm MgCl2; Thermo Pierce Scientific (Waltham, MA, USA) phosphatase/protease inhibitor tablet) using a probe sonicator. For immunoprecipitation (IP), lysis buffer also contained 0.5% Tritox X-100/150 mm NaCl, with IP performed using Protein A and Dynabeads as per manufacturer’s instructions (Life Technologies, Bedford, MA, USA). For Native PAGE, lysates were additionally nutated for 30 min at 4 °C with 0.5% Triton X-100, treated with 0.1 μl ml−1 (v/v) Thermo Pierce nuclease for 15 min at room temperature, and centrifuged at 20 000 g for 30 min at 4 °C. For fractionation, homogenates were spun at 1000 g × 10 min at 4 °C to remove nuclear fractions. Supernatants were then centrifuged at 89 000 r.c.f. × 10 min at 4 °C to yield a cytosolic supernatant fraction. The pellet was washed with a second resuspension, centrifuging and subsequent rinse with ice-cold lysis buffer. The pellet was then sonicated in ice-cold lysis buffer + 0.5% Triton X-100, nutated for 30 min at 4 °C, and centrifuged at 60 000 r.c.f. × 30 min at 4 °C to yield the soluble membrane supernatant fraction. Samples were stored at −80 °C until use. Protein levels were quantified using the DC Protein Assay kit (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA, USA) as per manufacturer’s instructions.
Western blotting
Lysates were run on either denaturing NuPAGE Novex 4–12% Bis-Tris or Native PAGE Novex 4-16% Bis-Tris gels, as per manufacturer’s instruction (Life Technologies). Blots were probed overnight at 4 °C with antibodies recognizing PDE11A (1:500, PD11A-112AP FabGennix—Frisco, TX, USA4, 5, 6), PDE2A (1:1000, PD2A-101AP FabGennix38), PDE10A (1:2500, Enzo Life Science, Farmingdale, NY, USA39), actin (1:10,000, A2066 Sigma, St. Louis, MO), IL-6 (1:200, MAB406 R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN, USA40), GFP (1:2000, sc-8334 Santa Cruz, Dallas, TX, USA), or RFP (1:10 000, A00682 Genscript, Township, NJ, USA). Blots were then processed as previously published.4, 6, 41
In situ hybridization
Animals were killed by cervical dislocation. Brains were cryosectioned at 20 μm and autoradiography for the various PDEs was performed as previously reported.4, 5, 6, 38, 42 For Ahrgap32 autoradiography was similarly performed using the following antisense probe (3′-AGCCCTGTTTGAGTCAGTCTCAGTGAGAGCTCTCTG-5′, NM_177379.4), the specificity of which was confirmed by obtaining identical labeling with a second antisense probe sequence and no signal with the sense version of the probes.
Plasmid generation
Plasmids encoding either mouse Pde11a4 (NM_001081033; 499A) with N-terminally fused EmGFP43 (A206Y mutation introduced to prevent EmGFP dimerization) or an isolated Pde11a4 GAF-B domain (aa388-558 of NP_001074502.1,which includes 14 upstream amino acids as a spacer) with N-terminally fused mCherry44 were synthesized in pUC57 by Genscript and subsequently subcloned into pcDNA3.1+ mammalian expression vectors (Life Technologies). 499T/499D mutations were generated using the QuikChange procedure and products (Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, USA). Oligonucleotide primers were synthesized by Integrated DNA Technologies (Coralville, IA, USA) and mutations were verified by DNA sequencing (Functional Biosciences, Madison, WI, USA). Similar constructs expressing only EGFP or mCherry were used as controls.
Cell culture and transfections
COS-1 and HEK293T cells (ATCC, Manassas, VA, USA) were grown in 24-well plates or 100 mm dishes containing Glutamax media (Gibco, Gaithersburg, MD, USA)/10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) at 37 °C/5% CO2. Plasmid DNA was transiently transfected using Optimem and Lipofectamine 2000 as per manufacturer’s instructions (Life Technologies). The morning following transfection, Optimem was replaced with Glutamax media/5% FBS and cells continued to grow for 5–24 h. Cells were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde for imaging studies or harvested in lysis buffer for Westerns. Experiments shown in Figures 3d–o were repeated ⩾3 times with similar results.
Microscopy
For data collection, cells were imaged using a Leica HC PL Fluotar 10X/0.3 ∞/-/D objective on an inverted Leica DMIL microscope. One digital picture per well or dish was collected using NIS-Elements BR-2.30, and an experimenter blind to treatment then categorized the EmGFP-PDE11A4 expression pattern for each labeled cell in the image (cytoplasmic-only vs containing aggregates). Images shown in figure were collected using an LPI anFL PH2 40X/0.65 ∞/1.2 objective on an EVOSfl digital microscope.
Drugs
Lithium carbonate and control diets were obtained from Harlan Teklad. [0.2%] and [0.4%] were selected based on previous work showing [0.4%] achieves clinically-relevant plasma exposures.46 Mice were fed the chow for 3+ weeks and given access to 0.9% saline to mitigate potential ion imbalances.46 A 1.78 mg/kg subcutaneous dose of d-amphetamine (Sigma-Aldrich, salt corrected and dissolved in sterile saline at 10 ml kg−1) was selected based on our previous experience.41, 47
Behavior
To conduct TST, Scotch tape was wrapped around the mouse’s tail and then affixed to the hook of a Hamilton-Kinder TS100 tail suspension system. The time spent immobile during a 6-min trial was automatically recorded.48, 49 Locomotor activity was recorded using the Accuscan Versamax system and Versadat software as previously described.6, 41, 47
Data analyses
Data were collected in a blinded fashion, with technical variables counterbalanced across biological variables, and analyzed using Statistica 9.0 (Tulsa, OK, USA) or Sigmaplot 11.1 (San Jose, CA, USA). As previously described,6, 41, 42 to mitigate non-specific effects related to transfer efficiencies, film exposures, etc. across gels, Western blot data on a given gel were normalized to a reference group (for example, WT). Data were analyzed by analysis of variance, repeated measure analysis of variance, Student's t-test (t), Mann–Whitney rank sum (T), Wilcoxon signed-rank test (Z) or Pearson's product moment correlation as appropriate. T-tests were two sided. NOTE: where parametric tests failed equal variance or normality, nonparametric tests were used. Data were analyzed for effect of strain, brain region, fraction, plasmid, genotype, and/or sex where n’s were sufficient to examine a potential effect of sex (that is, if n>8 per sex per group). In cases of significant analysis of variances, post hoc analyses were conducted using the Student–Newman–Keuls method. As previously described,6, 41, 42, 50 statistical outliers >2 standard deviations from the mean were removed from analyses (Figure 2b, 1 of 16 subjects; Figures 3k, 1 of 72 samples; Figure 3n, 1 of 15 data points; Figure 3o, 2 of 22 data points; Figure 4a, 1 of 36 data points; Figure 4c, 1 of 77 subjects; Figure 5b, 2 out of 32 data points; Figure 5c, 1 out of 32 data points; Figure 5e, 2 of 36 subjects). Significance was defined as P<0.05.
Results
C57BL/6J mice, which respond well to lithium, express significantly lower levels of PDE11A4 than do BALB/cJ mice, which respond poorly to lithium
PDE11A4 expression and compartmentalization were measured in the hippocampi of mice that respond well (C57BL/6J), moderately (129S6), or poorly to chronic lithium (BALB/cJ).46, 53 Pde11a4 mRNA expression is significantly lower in the C57BL/6J and 129S6/SvEvTac mice relative to the BALB/cJ mice, but only in dorsal (d) and not ventral (v) CA1 (Figure 1a; F(2,17)=7.15, P=0.006). These differences in Pde11a4 mRNA expression were confirmed in a 2nd cohort of mice (Supplementary Figure S1). Similarly, C57BL/6J and 129S6/SvEvTac mice express significantly less PDE11A4 protein relative to BALB/cJ mice in both DHIPP and VHIPP (Figures 1d and g; F(2,33)=12.29, P<0.001), despite the lack of difference in Pde11a4 mRNA expression between the strains in VHIPP (Figure 1a, Supplementary Figure S1A-B). Furthermore, all three strains demonstrate far more expression PDE11A4 protein in VHIPP vs DHIPP (Figures 1d and g; F(1,33)=622.65, P<0.001), despite the fact that BALB/cJ mice fail to show the prototypical 2-fold enrichment of Pde11a4 mRNA in vCA1 vs dCA14, 5, 6 (Figure 1a, Supplementary Figure S1A-B). These differences in PDE11A4 protein expression were confirmed in a second cohort of mice (Supplementary Figure S2). In DHIPP, C57BL/6J mice show lower PDE11A4 protein expression relative to BALB/cJ mice in both the cytosolic and membrane compartments (Figure 2; F(1,9)=11.13, P=0.005). Interestingly, in VHIPP, C57BL/6J mice exhibit lower PDE11A4 protein expression relative to the BALB/cJ mice only in the membrane (Figure 2c; F(1,14)=10.63, P=0.006). These compartment-specific differences in PDE11A4 protein expression were confirmed in a second cohort of mice (Supplementary Figure S3). The substantial effect of mouse strain on PDE11A4 expression appears to be specific, because expression of PDE2A and PDE10A, the closest related PDEs with appreciable expression in the hippocampus, does not differ across these mouse strains (Figure 1 and Supplementary Figure S1-S2).
C57BL/6J mice compartmentalize PDE11A4 in VHIPP differently than do BALB/cJ mice due to a non-synonymous coding SNP in the GAF-B homodimerization domain
To determine whether genetic differences in the Pde11a sequence might drive the differential compartmentalization of PDE11A4 in VHIPP, we examined the mouse genome and SNPs using the UCSC Genome Browser54 and the Jackson Laboratory Phenome Database (JLPD).55 First we determined if the C57BL/6J Pde11a gene demonstrated a SNP homologous to human rs7585543, which was linked to lithium responsiveness in patients with bipolar disorder.10, 11 The text 'rs7585543' was used as a query in the UCSC Genome Browser (genome.ucsc.edu) and the Multiz genomic alignments of 44 vertebrates were examined closely. Although sequences of many species align well in this region, 600 nucleotides of mouse sequence are absent. Next, SNPs between 29 mouse strains were identified in the JLPD using “Pde11a” as a text query. Only four SNPs differed between C57BL/6J and BALB/cJ (129S6/SvEvTac not included in database): three synonymous (rs27939960, rs27939959, rs27981607) and one non-synonymous (rs27963339). The rs27963339 polymorphism encodes an alanine at position 499 in C57BL/6J and a threonine in BALB/cJ. Human PDE11A4 encodes an alanine at position 499, with only 1 variation (glycine; GCA→GGA) noted in 121,412 chromosomes sequenced (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/SNP/snp_ref.cgi?locusId=50940, accessed 04/19/16).56
Although non-coding SNPs can have functional consequences,57 the coding SNP was most likely to yield a differential compartmentalization signal because the SNP (1) leads to a non-phosphorylatable versus a phosphorylatable residue and (2) falls within the PDE11A4 GAF-B homodimerization domain.58 Post-translational modifications and protein-protein binding are the 2 key mechanisms known to regulate PDE trafficking.39, 59, 60 As such, we determined whether 499A vs 499T would differentially affect PDE11A4 homodimerization and if that, in turn, might lead to a differential compartmentalization of PDE11A4.
COS-1 cells were transiently transfected with plasmids containing EmGFP-PDE11A4 encoding the C57BL/6J 499A, the BALB/cJ 499T, or a phosphomimic 499D (Figure 3a). Results were compared to those obtained when PDE11A4 homodimerization was disrupted by co-expressing a dominant-negative isolated GAF-B domain (Figures 3b and c). Disrupting homodimerization with the isolated GAF-B domain significantly decreases expression of full-length PDE11A4 while generating an ~80 kDa proteolytic fragment (Supplementary Figure S4). Thus, total PDE11A4 protein expression was equilibrated between the control mCherry and GAF-B treatments by adding twice the transfection reaction to the GAF-B treated cells (Supplementary Figure S4A). Although 499T and 499D do not consistently differ from 499A in terms of total PDE11A4 protein expression (Supplementary Figure S4A), they do consistently differ in the expression of specific PDE11A4 macromolecular complexes, as determined by Native PAGE. Relative to 499A, 499T and 499D increase expression of a ~242 kDa PDE11A4 complex (Figures 3d and f; F(2,8)=6.835, P=0.019), a molecular weight consistent with an EmGFP-PDE11A4 homodimer. Indeed, disruption of homodimerization with the isolated GAF-B domain decreases expression of the ~242 kDa complex (Figures 3e and g; t(10)=4.041, P=0.002).
Consistent with these effects on homodimerization, fluorescent microscopy reveals that 499T and 499D promote trafficking of PDE11A4 into aggregates in COS-1 cells (F(2,21)=16.97, P<0.001); whereas, the isolated GAF-B domain prevents aggregation (Figures 3h–j; t(10)=8.88, P<0.001). 499T and 499D increase the percentage of cells that developed aggregates as opposed to increasing the total number of aggregates per cell or the average size of the aggregates. The ability of 499T and 499D to increase aggregation and the ability of the isolated GAF-B domain to decrease aggregation are also observed in HEK293T cells (499: F(2,21)=38.95, P<0.001; GAF-B: t(6)=4.20, P=0.006). Importantly, adding the isolated GAF-B domain to 499T and 499D completely blocks their ability to promote PDE11A4 aggregation in COS-1 cells (Figures 3h and k), further suggesting that 499T and 499D increase trafficking of PDE11A4 into aggregates by promoting homodimerization. Biochemical fractionations show that 499T and 499D shift PDE11A4 from the cytosol to the membrane relative to 499A (Figures 3l and n; F(2,41)=8.80, P<0.001), directly mimicking PDE11A4 in VHIPP of C57BL/6J vs BALB/cJ mice (Figure 2c). Furthermore, disrupting homodimerization with the isolated GAF-B domain shifts PDE11A4 in the opposite direction—from the membrane to the cytosol (Figures 3m and o; t(18)=4.87, P<0.001).
PDE11A KO mice exhibit alterations in cAMP signaling and are more sensitive to the antidepressant and anti-manic effects of lithium
As noted above, disturbances in cyclic nucleotide signaling have been repeatedly observed in patients with bipolar disorder (for example, refs 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26). Direct measures of baseline cAMP signaling in the hippocampus of lithium-responsive versus non-responsive patients is lacking; however, increased basal phosphorylation of cAMP response element binding protein (pCREB) expression has been noted in lymphoblasts of lithium-responsive patients.24 As such, we measured pCREB in PDE11A KO vs WT littermates along with expression of an mRNA under the control of pCREB signaling (that is, Arhgap32). We did not observe a significant difference in pCREB phosphorylation between PDE11A KO mice relative to WT littermates when examining the VHIPP as a whole (WT, 1.00 ±0.07 a.u.; KO, 1.132 ±0.08 a.u.; n=18 per genotype), likely due to the fact that PDE11A4 is only expressed within a subpopulation of neurons in CA1 and the subiculum.61 We were, however, able to detect a significant decrease in Arhgap32 mRNA when measuring expression in VCA1 specifically (Figures 4a; t(15)=2.67, P=0.017), a change that is consistent with a localized increase in pCREB phosphorylation.51, 52
The ability of a drug to reduce immobility in TST is predictive of antidepressant-like activity,62 and the ability of a drug to decrease the hyperlocomotor effects of d-amphetamine is indicative of anti-manic or antipsychotic-like effects.63, 64 As we previously reported using single-housed mice,6 group-housed PDE11A KO mice show no basal difference in TST immobility relative to WT mice when fed a control diet. Group-housed PDE11A KO mice do, however, exhibit decreased TST immobility in response to a 0.4% lithium chow while group-housed WT mice do not (Figure 4b; F(2,49)=3.52, P=0.037). Interestingly, when the colony is single-housed, all genotypes demonstrate a significant reduction in TST immobility in response to 0.4% lithium chow (F(2,172)=9.41, P=0.003), possibly because single housing decreases PDE11A4 expression in WT mice.65 As previously reported,6 we found no effect of genotype on d-amphetamine-stimulated hyperactivity when mice consumed a control chow diet (data not shown). When fed 0.4% lithium chow, however, PDE11A HT and KO mice demonstrate a significantly blunted hyperlocomotor response to d-amphetamine relative to WT littermates during the 70-min (F(2,70)=4.50, P=0.015), 75-min (F(2,70)=6.76, P=0.002), 80-min (F(2,70)=5.64, P=0.005), 85-min (F(2,70)=5.12, P=0.008) and 90-min time bins (F(2,70)=6.69, P=0.002). Altogether, these data show that decreased PDE11A expression is sufficient to increase lithium responsivity.
Lower PDE11A4 expression increases IL-6 expression
Finally, we determined if PDE11A4 regulates expression of the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-6, a potential mood disorder biomarker30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37 whose elevated expression is reversed by lithium.35 Relative to the lithium-unresponsive BALB/cJ mice, the lithium-responsive C57BL/6J mice express significantly higher levels of IL-6 in both cytosol (t(14)=94, P=0.005) and membrane of DHIPP (t(13)=7.43, P<0.001)) but only in cytosol of VHIPP (T(13)=76.00, P=0.001; Figures 5a and c). In VHIPP of C57BL/6J and BALB/cJ mice, lower PDE11A4 expression in membrane correlates with higher IL-6 expression in cytosol (Figure 5d). In DHIPP, PDE11A KO mice demonstrate significantly higher IL-6 expression than do their paired sex-matched WT littermates (Figure 5e; Z(32)=2.84, P=0.003).
Discussion
Here we show that PDE11A, an enzyme genetically associated with lithium responsivity in patients with bipolar disorder, negatively regulates lithium responsivity in mice. PDE11A4 expression in the DHIPP and VHIPP are significantly reduced in lithium-responsive C57BL/6J and 129S6/SvEvTac mice vs lithium-unresponsive BALB/cJ mice (Figures 1 and 2, Supplementary Figures S1–S3), and behavioral experiments using Pde11a KO mice show decreasing PDE11A expression is sufficient to increase lithium responsivity (Figure 4). A key driver of the PDE11A4 expression differences noted between mouse strains is a non-synonymous coding SNP falling within the PDE11A4 GAF-B domain, a mutation that alters levels of PDE11A4 homodimerization and compartmentalization (Figure 3). Our findings are consistent with a number of studies examining tissue from patients with bipolar disorder that describe significant changes in the cAMP cascade,18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 66, 67 including changes restricted to specific subcellular compartments18, 23, 25 and changes associated with lithium responsivity.24, 68
Strain differences in PDE11A4 compartmentalization are associated with genetically-driven differences in PDE11A4 homodimerization
We show that homodimerization is a key regulator of PDE11A4 subcellular compartmentalization (Figure 3). It has long been known that all PDEs homodimerize/oligomerize, but the functional significance of this interaction remained unknown.69 Homodimerization of PDE11A4 does not alter its substrate affinity;58 instead, it appears to control which pool of cyclic nucleotides PDE11A4 can degrade. We believe homodimerization/oligomerization will similarly control the subcellular compartmentalization of other GAF domain-containing PDE families, given recent reports showing GAF-B mutations change the subcellular compartmentalization of PDE6C (effect on oligomerization not directly assessed).70
A non-synonymous coding SNP falling within the GAF-B homodimerization domain encodes an alanine at amino acid 499 in C57BL/6J mice but a threonine in BALB/cJ mice. In vitro experiments show changing amino acid 499 from an alanine (499A) to a threonine (499T) or a phosphomimic aspartate (499D) promotes homodimerization (Figures 3d and f) and increases trafficking of PDE11A4 into aggregates (Figures 3h and i). Furthermore, 499T/D shifts PDE11A4 from the cytosol to the membrane (Figures 3l and n), perfectly replicating in vivo PDE11A4 expression observed in VHIPP of BALB/cJ vs C57BL/6J mice (Figure 2c). In contrast, disrupting homodimerization using an isolated GAF-B domain (Figures 3e and g) decreases trafficking of PDE11A4 into aggregates (Figure 3j), shifts PDE11A4 from the membrane to the cytosol (Figures 3m and o), and blocks the effect of the 499T and 499D mutations (Figure 3k). Indeed, homodimerization appears to regulate the subcellular compartmentalization of several proteins, including extracellular signal-regulated kinase 2,71 PleD72 and Islet-Brain 1.73 Differences in protein translation efficiency may also contribute to strain differences in PDE11A4 protein expression as it is a major factor controlling the relative protein expression levels of PDE6 subunits in the retina.74
PDE11A4 expression and compartmentalization differ between DHIPP and VHIPP
We and others have shown in multiple mouse and rat strains that Pde11a4 mRNA and protein are enriched in the hippocampus, with expression that is substantially higher in VHIPP vs DHIPP.4, 5, 6, 42, 75, 76 Here we believe we noted for the first time a mouse strain (that is, BALB/cJ) in which Pde11a4 mRNA expression in DHIPP was equivalent to that in VHIPP (Figure 1a, Supplementary Figure S1). Even though PDE11A4 mRNA expression did not differ between DHIPP and VHIPP in the BALB/cJ, PDE11A4 protein did show its typical dorsal-ventral gradient at the protein level in this mouse strain (Figures 1d and e, Supplementary Figure S2C–D). The molecular mechanisms driving these dorsal-ventral gradients in mRNA and protein expression remain to be determined. Preliminary evidence from our laboratory suggests the dorsal-ventral gradient in mRNA expression seen in most mouse and rat strains characterized to date is driven by transcriptional regulation of the promotor, as demonstrated by differential DHIPP vs VHIPP expression of an mCherry-reporter construct driven by the C57BL/6J PDE11A4 promoter (MP Kelly, personal observations). Indeed, Sox-5—a putative PDE11A4 transcription factor3—is expressed at significantly higher levels in VHIPP vs DHIPP.75
There is also a distinction between DHIPP vs VHIPP in terms of the subcellular compartments that show PDE11A4 protein expression differences between the mouse strains. In DHIPP, PDE11A4 expression differs between the strains in both cytosolic and membrane compartments, but in VHIPP PDE11A4 expression differs between C57BL/6J and BALB/cJ mice only in the membrane compartment. Again, the mechanism for this remains to be determined, but we hypothesize that phosphorylation of 499T in the BALB/cJ may make PDE11A4 more or less susceptible to other post-translational modifications whose key modifying enzymes show differential expression along the DHIPP-VHIPP axis. Indeed, preliminary evidence from our lab shows that phosphorylation of one site (for example, S162) within the PDE11A4 N-terminal domain affects the phosphorylation of other N-terminal sites (for example, S117 and S124) as well as the functional consequences of those phosphorylation events (WR Capell and MP Kelly, personal observations). Interestingly, protein kinase C is expressed at much higher levels in DHIPP vs VHIPP75 and is predicted to phosphorylate PDE11A4 at the aforementioned N-terminal residues.5 Exploring this hypothesis will be of interest to future studies.
Pde11a deletion is sufficient to increase lithium responsivity
Pde11a KO mice were more sensitive than WT mice to the effects of lithium in both TST and amphetamine-stimulated hyperactivity. This is consistent with the fact that the C57BL/6J and 129S6/SvEvTac mice with low PDE11A4 expression are more sensitive to the effects of lithium in TST and forced swim test (FST) than BALB/cJ mice with high PDE11A4 expression (Figures 1 and 2, Supplementary Figure S1–S3).46, 53 Specifically, following 3 weeks of lithium treatment, C57BL/6J mice demonstrated a significant antidepressant-like effect in both TST and FST, 129S6/SvEvTac mice demonstrated a significant antidepressant-like effect only in FST, and BALB/cJ mice demonstrated no effect in either assay.46 Similarly, 129S6/SvEvTac mice showed a significant antidepressant-like effect of acute lithium treatment in TST and FST, C57BL/6J mice showed a limited antidepressant-like effect in FST, and BALB/cJ mice showed no effect in either assay. C57BL/6J mice have also shown a significant anti-manic-like effect of lithium in amphetamine-stimulated locomotor activity; whereas, 129S6/SvEvTac mice did not (BALB/cJ mice not tested).63 The differential lithium sensitivity of C57BL/6J vs BALB/cJ mice is observed in both males and females whether reared by their own parents or cross-fostered by the opposite strain, suggesting a genetic difference in the offspring is driving this phenotype as opposed to strain differences in maternal care.53 Our studies here suggest that differential expression and compartmentalization of PDE11A4 may be at least 1 of those mechanisms.
It is important to note that the differential lithium sensitivity of the Pde11a KOs in TST was only detected in group-housed mice (Figure 4b). Specifically, both Pde11a WT and KO mice demonstrated antidepressant-like effects of lithium in TST when single housed, but only Pde11a KO mice demonstrated this antidepressant-like effect of lithium when group housed. This may suggest that, even when group housed, Pde11a KO mice experience subjective or objective social isolation, making them susceptible to the behavioral effects of lithium in TST. Alternatively, social isolation may decrease PDE11A4 expression in the WTs, making them susceptible to the effects of lithium in TST. Indeed, recent studies from our laboratory show that a normally social C57BL/6J mouse prefers to interact with a PDE11A WT vs. its KO littermate, and that social isolation decreases PDE11A4 protein expression specifically within the membrane compartment of the VHIPP.65 In this context it is interesting to note that lithium increases social interactions in FMR1 KO mice and their WT counterparts.77 It will be of interest to future studies to further characterize the effects of lithium in the Pde11a KO mice in other antidepressant-predictive assays (for example, FST46, 53) or in the context of manipulations intended to model aspects of bipolar disorder (for example, amphetamine sensitization41), particularly give the limited effect size observed herein in TST.
Reduced PDE11A4 expression may reflect a lithium-sensitive pathophysiology
Lower levels of PDE11A4 may predict better lithium responsiveness either because (1) a state of decreased PDE11A4 expression represents a specific disease state that is most responsive to lithium or (2) because reducing PDE11A4 expression somehow boosts lithium’s effects. PDE11A KO mice exhibit a number of behavioral, anatomical, and biochemical phenotypes relevant to psychiatric disease.6 Previously, we reported that PDE11A KO mice exhibit significantly reduced cAMP-PDE activity in VHIPP.6 We have struggled to measure changes in cAMP at the level of the whole VHIPP,6 we believe due to a signal:noise issue caused by the sparse nature of PDE11A4 expression within the hippocampus (that is, it is only expressed in a subpopulation of neurons in CA1 and subiculum, not CA3 nor DG).61 Interestingly, elevated levels of pCREB have been found in lymphoblasts from lithium-responsive bipolar disorder patients and their relatives compared to healthy controls.24 Here we were not able to measure a significant increase in pCREB in the PDE11A KO mice when examining the VHIPP as a whole; however, we were able to detect a significant decrease in Arhgap32 mRNA (a.k.a. p250gap, RICS) when examining ventral CA1 specifically (Figure 4a). Arhgap32 is a gene that is downregulated by increased pCREB signaling via miR132.51, 52 Of interest, Arhgap32 controls dendritic plasticity and has been genetically linked to the ability to identify/describe moods and feeling, schizophrenia, and autism.78, 79, 80 Increased activation of the cAMP cascade may represent a specific pathophysiology that is particularly responsive to lithium treatment because chronic lithium appears to decrease pCREB in hippocampus and cortex of rats.81
Here, C57BL/6J and PDE11A KO mice also exhibit significantly higher levels of the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-6 relative to BALB/cJ and WT mice, respectively (Figure 5). Increased IL-6 and/or IL-6 receptor expression is not selectively associated with bipolar disorder but has been repeatedly observed in patients with mania, depression, and suicidal ideation,30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 36, 37 and lithium decreases IL-6 expression in patient tissue.35 In addition, PDE11A KO mice and iPSC-derived hippocampal neurons from bipolar patients exhibit altered signaling in the neuroactive-ligand receptor pathway and increased neural activity).6, 16, 65 Altogether, these data argue that a state of decreased PDE11A4 expression represents a lithium-responsive pathophysiology. That said, lithium decreases PDE11A mRNA expression in iPSC-derived hippocampal neurons from lithium-responsive patients but not non-responsive patients, which is consistent with the idea that lowering PDE11A is key to the therapeutic actions of lithium.16 One possible explanation for these dichotomous results is the fact that the iPSC-derived hippocampal neurons were described as dentate gyrus granule cell-like neurons; however, endogenous PDE11A4 in the rodent brain is expressed in CA1 and subiculum, but not DG. Thus, it will be critical for future studies to determine which, if any, isoform of PDE11A is expressed in vivo in the human dentate gyrus, what functional implications that would hold for the hippocampal circuit, and exactly why lowering PDE11A expression is sufficient to increase lithium responsivity.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Jennifer Klett for technical assistance and Drs John Kelsoe and Susan Leckband for helpful discussion. This research was supported by a Research Starter Grant in Pharmacology & Toxicology from the PhRMA Foundation, an ASPIRE award from the Office of the Vice President for Research from the University of South Carolina, a Research Development Fund Award from the University of South Carolina School of Medicine, 1R01MH101130 from NIMH, and a NARSAD Young Investigator Award from the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation (all awards to MPK).
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MPK received consulting fees from ASUBIO, and Deallus for projects unrelated to the current manuscript and is a former employee of Pfizer. MJA is an employee of Pfizer. TT is a former employee of Pfizer and is currently an employee of Charles River and Biogen. The remaining authors declare no conflict of interest.
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Pathak, G., Agostino, M., Bishara, K. et al. PDE11A negatively regulates lithium responsivity. Mol Psychiatry 22, 1714–1724 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/mp.2016.155
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