4.7 Article

Direct current stimulation modulates gene expression in isolated astrocytes with implications for glia-mediated plasticity

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-22394-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01NS101362, NIH-NIDA UG3DA048502, NIH-NIGMS T34GM137858, NIH-NINDS 1R01NS112996, NIH-NINDS 1R01NS101362, NIH-NIMH 1R01MH111896, NIH-NINDS 1R01NS095123]

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This study investigates the effect of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) on gene expression in astrocytes and endothelial cells (ECs). The results suggest that tDCS can directly modulate gene expression in astrocytes, while in ECs, it primarily activates gene expression through pressure-driven flow. This study provides new insights into the mechanisms of tDCS and highlights the role of glial cells in this process.
While the applications of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) across brain disease and cognition are diverse, they rely on changes in brain function outlasting stimulation. The cellular mechanisms of DCS leading to brain plasticity have been studied, but the role of astrocytes remains unaddressed. We previously predicted that during tDCS current is concentrated across the blood brain-barrier. This will amplify exposure of endothelial cells (ECs) that form blood vessels and of astrocytes that wrap around them. The objective of this study was to investigate the effect of tDCS on the gene expression by astrocytes or ECs. DCS (0.1 or 1 mA, 10 min) was applied to monolayers of mouse brain ECs or human astrocytes. Gene expression of a set of neuroactive genes were measured using RT-qPCR. Expression was assessed immediately or 1 h after DCS. Because we previously showed that DCS can produce electroosmotic flow and fluid shear stress known to influence EC and astrocyte function, we compared three interventions: pressure-driven flow across the monolayer alone, pressure-driven flow plus DCS, and DCS alone with flow blocked. We show that DCS can directly modulate gene expression in astrocytes (notably FOS and BDNF), independent of but synergistic with pressure-driven flow gene expression. In ECs, pressure-driven flow activates genes expression with no evidence of further contribution from DCS. In ECs, DCS alone produced mixed effects including an upregulation of FGF9 and downregulation of NTF3. We propose a new adjunct mechanism for tDCS based on glial meditated plasticity.

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