GeneSet Information

Tier III GS218677 • Fly genes with H4AC changes after EtOH exposure.

DESCRIPTION:

Histone H4 acetylation (H4Ac) in response to ethanol was measure using the chromatin-immunoprecipitation assay (ChIP–chip) From Supplemental Data file 1, gene names and score were uploaded.

LABEL:

Fly genes H4Ac after EtOH

SCORE TYPE:

Effect

DATE ADDED:

None

DATE UPDATED:

2024-04-25

SPECIES:

AUTHORS:

Ghezzi A, Krishnan HR, Lew L, Prado FJ 3rd, Ong DS, Atkinson NS

TITLE:

Alcohol-induced histone acetylation reveals a gene network involved in alcohol tolerance.

JOURNAL:

PLoS genetics Dec 2013, Vol 9, pp. e1003986

ABSTRACT:

Sustained or repeated exposure to sedating drugs, such as alcohol, triggers homeostatic adaptations in the brain that lead to the development of drug tolerance and dependence. These adaptations involve long-term changes in the transcription of drug-responsive genes as well as an epigenetic restructuring of chromosomal regions that is thought to signal and maintain the altered transcriptional state. Alcohol-induced epigenetic changes have been shown to be important in the long-term adaptation that leads to alcohol tolerance and dependence endophenotypes. A major constraint impeding progress is that alcohol produces a surfeit of changes in gene expression, most of which may not make any meaningful contribution to the ethanol response under study. Here we used a novel genomic epigenetic approach to find genes relevant for functional alcohol tolerance by exploiting the commonalities of two chemically distinct alcohols. In Drosophila melanogaster, ethanol and benzyl alcohol induce mutual cross-tolerance, indicating that they share a common mechanism for producing tolerance. We surveyed the genome-wide changes in histone acetylation that occur in response to these drugs. Each drug induces modifications in a large number of genes. The genes that respond similarly to either treatment, however, represent a subgroup enriched for genes important for the common tolerance response. Genes were functionally tested for behavioral tolerance to the sedative effects of ethanol and benzyl alcohol using mutant and inducible RNAi stocks. We identified a network of genes that are essential for the development of tolerance to sedation by alcohol. PUBMED: 24348266
Find other GeneSets from this publication

Annotation Information

No sequence read archive data associated with this GeneSet.


No annotations are associated with this GeneSet.

Gene List • 1016 Genes

Uploaded As Gene Symbol Homology Score Priority LinkOuts Emphasis