422 research outputs found

    Mapping of the spontaneous deletion in the Ap3d1 gene of mocha mice: fast and reliable genotyping

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The <it>mocha </it>mouse carries a spontaneous deletion in the <it>Ap3d1 </it>gene, encoding the delta 1 subunit of the adaptor related protein complex 3, (Ap3d1), and subsequently lack the expression of functional AP-3. This leads to a deficiency in vesicle transport and storage, which affects neurotransmitter vesicle turnover and release in the central nervous system. Since the genomic sequence of the <it>Ap3d1 </it>gene of <it>mocha </it>mouse is not known, precise mapping of the deletion as well as reliable genotyping protocols are lacking.</p> <p>Findings</p> <p>We sequenced the <it>Ap3d1 </it>gene (HGNC GeneID: 8943) around the deletion site in the <it>mocha </it>mouse and revealed a 10639 bp deletion covering exon 2 to 6. Subsequently, new PCR primers were designed yielding a reliable genotyping protocol of both newborn and adult tissue. To examine the genotypes further, hippocampal neurons were cultured from <it>mocha </it>and control mice. Patch-clamp recordings showed that <it>mocha </it>neurons had a higher input resistance, and that autaptic EPSC in <it>mocha </it>cultures depressed faster and stronger as compared with control cultures.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our study reports the sequence of the deleted part of the <it>Ap3d1 </it>gene in <it>mocha </it>mice, as well as a reliable PCR-based genotyping protocol. We cultured hippocampal neurons from control and <it>mocha </it>mice, and found a difference in input resistance of the neurons, and in the synaptic short-term plasticity of glutamatergic autapses showing a larger synaptic depression than controls. The described procedures may be useful for the future utilization of the <it>mocha </it>mouse as a model of defective vesicle biogenesis. Importantly, as genotyping by eye color is complicated in newborn mice, the designed protocol is so fast and reliable that newborn mice could rapidly be genotyped and hippocampal neurons dissociated and cultured, which is normally best done at P0-P2.</p

    GABA Transporter Deficiency Causes Tremor, Ataxia, Nervousness, and Increased GABA-Induced Tonic Conductance in Cerebellum

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    GABA transporter subtype 1 (GAT1) knock-out (KO) mice display normal reproduction and life span but have reduced body weight (female, -10%; male, -20%) and higher body temperature fluctuations in the 0.2-1.5/h frequency range. Mouse GAT1 (mGAT1) KO mice exhibit motor disorders, including gait abnormality, constant 25-32 Hz tremor, which is aggravated by flunitrazepam, reduced rotarod performance, and reduced locomotor activity in the home cage. Open-field tests show delayed exploratory activity, reduced rearing, and reduced visits to the central area, with no change in the total distance traveled. The mGAT1 KO mice display no difference in acoustic startle response but exhibit a deficiency in prepulse inhibition. These open-field and prepulse inhibition results suggest that the mGAT1 KO mice display mild anxiety or nervousness. The compromised GABA uptake in mGAT1 KO mice results in an increased GABA_A receptor-mediated tonic conductance in both cerebellar granule and Purkinje cells. The reduced rate of GABA clearance from the synaptic cleft is probably responsible for the slower decay of spontaneous IPSCs in cerebellar granule cells. There is little or no compensatory change in other proteins or structures related to GABA transmission in the mGAT1 KO mice, including GAT1-independent GABA uptake, number of GABAergic interneurons, and GABA_A-, vesicular GABA transporter-, GAD65-, and GAT3-immunoreactive structures in cerebellum or hippocampus. Therefore, the excessive extracellular GABA present in mGAT1 KO mice results in behaviors that partially phenocopy the clinical side effects of tiagabine, suggesting that these side effects are inherent to a therapeutic strategy that targets the widely expressed GAT1 transporter system

    Number, Density, and Surface/Cytoplasmic Distribution of GABA Transporters at Presynaptic Structures of Knock-In Mice Carrying GABA Transporter Subtype 1–Green Fluorescent Protein Fusions

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    GABA transporter subtype 1 (GAT1) molecules were counted near GABAergic synapses, to a resolution of ∼0.5 μm. Fusions between GAT1 and green fluorescent protein (GFP) were tested in heterologous expression systems, and a construct was selected that shows function, expression level, and trafficking similar to that of wild-type (WT) GAT1. A strain of knock-in mice was constructed that expresses this mGAT1–GFP fusion in place of the WT GAT1 gene. The pattern of fluorescence in brain slices agreed with previous immunocytochemical observations. [^3H]GABA uptake, synaptic electrophysiology, and subcellular localization of the mGAT1–GFP construct were also compared with WT mice. Quantitative fluorescence microscopy was used to measure the density of mGAT1–GFP at presynaptic structures in CNS preparations from the knock-in mice. Fluorescence measurements were calibrated with transparent beads and gels that have known GFP densities. Surface biotinylation defined the fraction of transporters on the surface versus those in the nearby cytoplasm. The data show that the presynaptic boutons of GABAergic interneurons in cerebellum and hippocampus have a membrane density of 800–1300 GAT1 molecules per square micrometer, and the axons that connect boutons have a linear density of 640 GAT1 molecules per micrometer. A cerebellar basket cell bouton, a pinceau surrounding a Purkinje cell axon, and a cortical chandelier cell cartridge carry 9000, 7.8 million, and 430,000 GAT1 molecules, respectively; 61–63% of these molecules are on the surface membrane. In cultures from hippocampus, the set of fluorescent cells equals the set of GABAergic interneurons. Knock-in mice carrying GFP fusions of membrane proteins provide quantitative data required for understanding the details of synaptic transmission in living neurons

    Number, Density, and Surface/Cytoplasmic Distribution of GABA Transporters at Presynaptic Structures of Knock-In Mice Carrying GABA Transporter Subtype 1–Green Fluorescent Protein Fusions

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    GABA transporter subtype 1 (GAT1) molecules were counted near GABAergic synapses, to a resolution of ∼0.5 μm. Fusions between GAT1 and green fluorescent protein (GFP) were tested in heterologous expression systems, and a construct was selected that shows function, expression level, and trafficking similar to that of wild-type (WT) GAT1. A strain of knock-in mice was constructed that expresses this mGAT1–GFP fusion in place of the WT GAT1 gene. The pattern of fluorescence in brain slices agreed with previous immunocytochemical observations. [^3H]GABA uptake, synaptic electrophysiology, and subcellular localization of the mGAT1–GFP construct were also compared with WT mice. Quantitative fluorescence microscopy was used to measure the density of mGAT1–GFP at presynaptic structures in CNS preparations from the knock-in mice. Fluorescence measurements were calibrated with transparent beads and gels that have known GFP densities. Surface biotinylation defined the fraction of transporters on the surface versus those in the nearby cytoplasm. The data show that the presynaptic boutons of GABAergic interneurons in cerebellum and hippocampus have a membrane density of 800–1300 GAT1 molecules per square micrometer, and the axons that connect boutons have a linear density of 640 GAT1 molecules per micrometer. A cerebellar basket cell bouton, a pinceau surrounding a Purkinje cell axon, and a cortical chandelier cell cartridge carry 9000, 7.8 million, and 430,000 GAT1 molecules, respectively; 61–63% of these molecules are on the surface membrane. In cultures from hippocampus, the set of fluorescent cells equals the set of GABAergic interneurons. Knock-in mice carrying GFP fusions of membrane proteins provide quantitative data required for understanding the details of synaptic transmission in living neurons

    The schizophrenia associated BRD1 gene regulates behavior, neurotransmission, and expression of schizophrenia risk enriched gene sets in mice

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    BackgroundThe schizophrenia-associated BRD1 gene encodes a transcriptional regulator whose comprehensive chromatin interactome is enriched with schizophrenia risk genes. However, the biology underlying the disease association of BRD1 remains speculative.MethodsThis study assessed the transcriptional drive of a schizophrenia-associated BRD1 risk variant in vitro. Accordingly, to examine the effects of reduced Brd1 expression, we generated a genetically modified Brd1+/- mouse and subjected it to behavioral, electrophysiological, molecular, and integrative genomic analyses with focus on schizophrenia-relevant parameters.ResultsBrd1+/- mice displayed cerebral histone H3K14 hypo-acetylation and a broad range of behavioral changes with translational relevance to schizophrenia. These behaviors were accompanied by striatal dopamine/serotonin abnormalities and cortical excitation-inhibition imbalances involving loss of parvalbumin immunoreactive interneurons. RNAseq analyses of cortical and striatal micropunches from Brd1+/- and wild-type mice revealed differential expression of genes enriched for schizophrenia risk including several schizophrenia GWAS risk genes (e.g. calcium channel subunits (Cacna1c and Cacnb2), cholinergic muscarinic receptor 4 (Chrm4), dopamine receptor D2 (Drd2), and transcription factor 4 (Tcf4)). Integrative analyses further found differentially expressed genes to cluster in functional networks and canonical pathways associated with mental illness and molecular signaling processes (e.g. glutamatergic, monaminergic, calcium, cAMP, DARPP-32, and CREB signaling).ConclusionsOur study bridges the gap between genetic association and pathogenic effects and yields novel insights into the unfolding molecular changes in the brain of a new schizophrenia model that incorporates genetic risk at three levels: allelic, chromatin interactomic, and brain transcriptomic

    Number, Density, and Surface/Cytoplasmic Distribution of GABA Transporters at Presynaptic Structures of Knock-In Mice Carrying GABA Transporter Subtype 1–Green Fluorescent Protein Fusions

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    GABA transporter subtype 1 (GAT1) molecules were counted near GABAergic synapses, to a resolution of ∼0.5 μm. Fusions between GAT1 and green fluorescent protein (GFP) were tested in heterologous expression systems, and a construct was selected that shows function, expression level, and trafficking similar to that of wild-type (WT) GAT1. A strain of knock-in mice was constructed that expresses this mGAT1–GFP fusion in place of the WT GAT1 gene. The pattern of fluorescence in brain slices agreed with previous immunocytochemical observations. [^3H]GABA uptake, synaptic electrophysiology, and subcellular localization of the mGAT1–GFP construct were also compared with WT mice. Quantitative fluorescence microscopy was used to measure the density of mGAT1–GFP at presynaptic structures in CNS preparations from the knock-in mice. Fluorescence measurements were calibrated with transparent beads and gels that have known GFP densities. Surface biotinylation defined the fraction of transporters on the surface versus those in the nearby cytoplasm. The data show that the presynaptic boutons of GABAergic interneurons in cerebellum and hippocampus have a membrane density of 800–1300 GAT1 molecules per square micrometer, and the axons that connect boutons have a linear density of 640 GAT1 molecules per micrometer. A cerebellar basket cell bouton, a pinceau surrounding a Purkinje cell axon, and a cortical chandelier cell cartridge carry 9000, 7.8 million, and 430,000 GAT1 molecules, respectively; 61–63% of these molecules are on the surface membrane. In cultures from hippocampus, the set of fluorescent cells equals the set of GABAergic interneurons. Knock-in mice carrying GFP fusions of membrane proteins provide quantitative data required for understanding the details of synaptic transmission in living neurons

    BDNF Depresses Excitability of Parvalbumin-Positive Interneurons through an M-Like Current in Rat Dentate Gyrus.

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    In addition to their classical roles in neuronal growth, survival and differentiation, neurotrophins are also rapid regulators of excitability, synaptic transmission and activity-dependent synaptic plasticity. We have recently shown that mature BDNF (Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor), but not proBDNF, modulates the excitability of interneurons in dentate gyrus within minutes. Here, we used brain slice patch-clamp recordings to study the mechanisms through which BDNF modulates the firing of interneurons in rat dentate gyrus by binding to TrkB receptors. Bath application of BDNF (15 ng/ml) under current-clamp decreased the firing frequency (by 80%) and input resistance, blocking the delayed firing observed at near-threshold voltage ranges, with no changes in resting membrane potential or action potential waveform. Using TEA (tetraethylammonium), or XE991(a Kv7/KCNQ channel antagonist), the effect of BDNF was abolished, whereas application of retigabine (a Kv7/KCNQ channel opener) mimicked the effect of BDNF, suggesting that the M-current could be implicated in the modulation of the firing. In voltage-clamp experiments, BDNF increased the M-like current amplitude with no change in holding current. This effect was again blocked by XE991 and mimicked by retigabine, the latter accompanied with a change in holding current. In agreement with the electrophysiology, parvalbumin-positive interneurons co-expressed TrkB receptors and Kv7.2/KCNQ2 channels. In conclusion, BDNF depresses the excitability of interneurons by activating an M-like current and possibly blocking Kv1 channels, thereby controlling interneuron resting membrane potential and excitability

    Tetanus-induced asynchronous GABA release in cultured hippocampal neurons. Brain Res

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    Abstract Asynchronous GABA release was studied in cultured hippocampal neurons using paired whole-cell recordings. Tetanization of the presynaptic GABAergic neuron was accompanied by a train of IPSCs which showed tetanic depression. Asynchronous IPSCs (asIPSCs) also developed during the train and continued for 1.8560.3 s after the stimulation. The threshold frequency for evoking asIPSCs was 10 21 Hz, while maximal asynchronous activity was achieved at 40 Hz. Perfusion with EGTA-AM blocked asIPSCs. The elevation of [Ca ] i that accompanies presynaptic action potential firing triggers asynchronous release of GABA vesicles, thereby counteracting tetanic depression of synchronous IPSCs
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