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Publication : Developmental, cellular, and behavioral phenotypes in a mouse model of congenital hypoplasia of the dentate gyrus.

First Author  Rattner A Year  2020
Journal  Elife Volume  9
PubMed ID  33084572 Mgi Jnum  J:298694
Mgi Id  MGI:6477128 Doi  10.7554/eLife.62766
Citation  Rattner A, et al. (2020) Developmental, cellular, and behavioral phenotypes in a mouse model of congenital hypoplasia of the dentate gyrus. Elife 9:e62766
abstractText  In the hippocampus, a widely accepted model posits that the dentate gyrus improves learning and memory by enhancing discrimination between inputs. To test this model, we studied conditional knockout mice in which the vast majority of dentate granule cells (DGCs) fail to develop - including nearly all DGCs in the dorsal hippocampus - secondary to eliminating Wntless (Wls) in a subset of cortical progenitors with Gfap-Cre. Other cells in the Wls(fl/-);Gfap-Cre hippocampus were minimally affected, as determined by single nucleus RNA sequencing. CA3 pyramidal cells, the targets of DGC-derived mossy fibers, exhibited normal morphologies with a small reduction in the numbers of synaptic spines. Wls(fl/-);Gfap-Cre mice have a modest performance decrement in several complex spatial tasks, including active place avoidance. They were also modestly impaired in one simpler spatial task, finding a visible platform in the Morris water maze. These experiments support a role for DGCs in enhancing spatial learning and memory.
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