2 research outputs found

    Circuit-selective cell-autonomous regulation of inhibition in pyramidal neurons by Ste20-like kinase

    Get PDF
    Maintaining an appropriate balance between excitation and inhibition is critical for neuronal information processing. Cortical neurons can cell-autonomously adjust the inhibition they receive to individual levels of excitatory input, but the underlying mechanisms are unclear. We describe that Ste20-like kinase (SLK) mediates cell-autonomous regulation of excitation-inhibition balance in the thalamocortical feedforward circuit, but not in the feedback circuit. This effect is due to regulation of inhibition originating from parvalbumin-expressing interneurons, while inhibition via somatostatin-expressing interneurons is unaffected. Computational modeling shows that this mechanism promotes stable excitatory-inhibitory ratios across pyramidal cells and ensures robust and sparse coding. Patch-clamp RNA sequencing yields genes differentially regulated by SLK knockdown, as well as genes associated with excitation-inhibition balance participating in transsynaptic communication and cytoskeletal dynamics. These data identify a mechanism for cell-autonomous regulation of a specific inhibitory circuit that is critical to ensure that a majority of cortical pyramidal cells participate in information coding

    Supplementary Material for: Neurochemical profile of BRAFV600E/AktT308D/S473D mouse gangliogliomas reveals impaired GABAergic system inhibition

    No full text
    Gangliogliomas (GGs), composed of dysmorphic neurons and neoplastic astroglia, represent the most frequent tumor entity associated with chronic recurrent epileptic seizures. So far, a systematic analysis of potential differences in neurochemical profiles of dysmorphic tumoral neurons as well as neurons of the peritumoral microenvironment (PTME) was hampered by the inability to unequivocally differentiate between the distinct neuronal components in human GG biopsies. Here, we have applied a novel GG mouse model that allows to clearly resolve the neurochemical profiles of GG-intrinsic versus PTME neurons. For this purpose, glioneuronal tumors in mice were induced by intraventricular in utero electroporation (IUE) of piggyBac-based plasmids for BRAFV600E and activated Akt (AktT308D/S473D, further referred to as AktDD) and analyzed neurochemically by immunocytochemistry against specific marker proteins. IUE of BRAFV600E/AktDD in mice resulted in tumors with the morphological features of human GGs. Our immunocytochemical analysis revealed a strong reduction of GABAARα1 immunoreactivity in the tumor compared to the PTME. In contrast, the extent of NMDAR1 immunoreactivity in the tumor appeared comparable to the PTME. Interestingly, tumor cells maintained the potential to express both receptors. Fittingly, the abundance of the presynaptic vesicular neurotransmitter transporters VGLUT1 and VGAT was also decreased in the tumor. Additionally, the fraction of parvalbumin and somatostatin non-neoplastic interneurons was reduced. In conclusion, changes in the levels of key proteins in neurotransmitter signaling suggest a loss of synapses and may thereby lead to neuronal network alterations in mouse GGs
    corecore