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Spine pruning drives antipsychotic-sensitive locomotion via circuit control of striatal dopamine.

Authors :
Kim IH
Rossi MA
Aryal DK
Racz B
Kim N
Uezu A
Wang F
Wetsel WC
Weinberg RJ
Yin H
Soderling SH
Source :
Nature neuroscience [Nat Neurosci] 2015 Jun; Vol. 18 (6), pp. 883-91. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 May 04.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Psychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders may arise from anomalies in long-range neuronal connectivity downstream of pathologies in dendritic spines. However, the mechanisms that may link spine pathology to circuit abnormalities relevant to atypical behavior remain unknown. Using a mouse model to conditionally disrupt a critical regulator of the dendritic spine cytoskeleton, the actin-related protein 2/3 complex (Arp2/3), we report here a molecular mechanism that unexpectedly reveals the inter-relationship of progressive spine pruning, elevated frontal cortical excitation of pyramidal neurons and striatal hyperdopaminergia in a cortical-to-midbrain circuit abnormality. The main symptomatic manifestations of this circuit abnormality are psychomotor agitation and stereotypical behaviors, which are relieved by antipsychotics. Moreover, this antipsychotic-responsive locomotion can be mimicked in wild-type mice by optogenetic activation of this circuit. Collectively these results reveal molecular and neural-circuit mechanisms, illustrating how diverse pathologies may converge to drive behaviors relevant to psychiatric disorders.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1546-1726
Volume :
18
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature neuroscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25938885
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nn.4015