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- Source :
- Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience.
-
Abstract
- Podoplanin (Pdpn), a brain-tumor-related glycoprotein identified in humans and animals, is endogenously expressed in several organs critical for life support such as kidney, lung, heart and brain. In the brain, Pdpn has been identified in proliferative nestin-positive adult neural progenitor cells and in neurons of the neurogenic hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG), a structure associated to anxiety, critical for learning and memory functions and severely damaged in people with Alzheimer's Disease (AD). The in vivo role of Pdpn in adult neurogenesis and anxiety-like behavior remained however unexplored. Using mice with disrupted Pdpn gene as a model organism and applying combined behavioral, molecular biological and electrophysiological assays, we here show that the absence of Pdpn selectively impairs long-term synaptic depression in the neurogenic DG without affecting the CA3-Schaffer's collateral-CA1 synapses. Pdpn deletion also enhanced the proliferative capacity of DG neural progenitor cells and diminished survival of differentiated neuronal cells in vitro. In addition, mice with podoplanin gene disruption showed increased anxiety-like behaviors in experimentally validated behavioral tests as compared to wild type littermate controls. Together, these findings broaden our knowledge on the molecular mechanisms influencing hippocampal synaptic plasticity and neurogenesis in vivo and reveal Pdpn as a novel molecular target for future studies addressing general anxiety disorder and synaptic depression-related memory dysfunctions.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
ved/biology
Dentate gyrus
ved/biology.organism_classification_rank.species
Neurogenesis
Hippocampus
Biology
Hippocampal formation
Neural stem cell
03 medical and health sciences
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
030104 developmental biology
0302 clinical medicine
Podoplanin
Model organism
PDPN
Neuroscience
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 16625102
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........736cc06660cd9037472d5dc3d4f9b9c9