AI Article Synopsis

  • Psychiatric and obstetric diseases are increasingly interconnected, with shared risks related to G protein-coupled receptor signaling, particularly in the context of RGS2 mutations linked to preeclampsia and depression.
  • Research on RGS2 knockout (KO) mice shows behaviors indicative of anxiety and depression, as well as changes in cerebrovascular structures, with notable sex-specific differences in serotonergic gene expression.
  • Findings highlight that RGS2 KO mice display altered serotonin signaling and increased sensitivity to sertraline, particularly in females, suggesting potential shared biological mechanisms between psychiatric and obstetric disorders that could inform future therapeutic targets.

Article Abstract

Psychiatric and obstetric diseases are growing threats to public health and share high rates of co-morbidity. G protein-coupled receptor signaling (e.g., vasopressin, serotonin) may be a convergent psycho-obstetric risk mechanism. Regulator of G Protein Signaling 2 (RGS2) mutations increase risk for both the gestational disease preeclampsia and for depression. We previously found preeclampsia-like, anti-angiogenic obstetric phenotypes with reduced placental Rgs2 expression in mice. Here, we extend this to test whether conserved cerebrovascular and serotonergic mechanisms are also associated with risk for neurobiological phenotypes in the Rgs2 KO mouse. Rgs2 KO exhibited anxiety-, depression-, and hedonic-like behaviors. Cortical vascular density and vessel length decreased in Rgs2 KO; cortical and white matter thickness and cell densities were unchanged. In Rgs2 KO, serotonergic gene expression was sex-specifically changed (e.g., cortical Htr2a, Maoa increased in females but all serotonin targets unchanged or decreased in males); redox-related expression increased in paraventricular nucleus and aorta; and angiogenic gene expression was changed in male but not female cortex. Whole-cell recordings from dorsal raphe serotonin neurons revealed altered 5-HT1A receptor-dependent inhibitory postsynaptic currents (5-HT1A-IPSCs) in female but not male KO neurons. Additionally, serotonin transporter blockade by the SSRI sertraline increased the amplitude and time-to-peak of 5-HT1A-IPSCs in KO neurons to a greater extent than in WT neurons in females only. These results demonstrate behavioral, cerebrovascular, and sertraline hypersensitivity phenotypes in Rgs2 KOs, some of which are sex-specific. Disruptions may be driven by vascular and cell stress mechanisms linking the shared pathogenesis of psychiatric and obstetric disease to reveal future targets.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10948883PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41386-023-01749-3DOI Listing

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