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Publication : Modular, Circuit-Based Interventions Rescue Hippocampal-Dependent Social and Spatial Memory in a 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome Mouse Model.

First Author  Kahn JB Year  2020
Journal  Biol Psychiatry Volume  88
Issue  9 Pages  710-718
PubMed ID  32682567 Mgi Jnum  J:320804
Mgi Id  MGI:6820631 Doi  10.1016/j.biopsych.2020.04.028
Citation  Kahn JB, et al. (2020) Modular, Circuit-Based Interventions Rescue Hippocampal-Dependent Social and Spatial Memory in a 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome Mouse Model. Biol Psychiatry 88(9):710-718
abstractText  BACKGROUND: 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22qDS) manifests with myriad symptoms, including multiple neuropsychiatric disorders. Complications associated with the polygenic haploinsufficiency make 22qDS symptoms particularly difficult to manage with traditional therapeutic approaches. However, the varying mechanistic consequences often culminate to generate inappropriate regulation of neuronal circuit activity. We explored whether managing this aberrant activity in adults could be a therapeutically beneficial strategy. METHODS: To assess and dissect hippocampal circuit function, we performed functional imaging in acute slices and targeted eloquent circuits (specific subcircuits tied to specific behavioral tasks) to provide relevant behavioral outputs. For example, the ventral and dorsal CA1 regions critically support social and spatial discrimination, respectively. We focally introduced chemogenetic constructs in 34 control and 24 22qDS model mice via adeno-associated viral vectors, driven by excitatory neuron-specific promoter elements, to manipulate circuit recruitment in an on-demand fashion. RESULTS: 22qDS model mice exhibited CA1 excitatory ensemble hyperexcitability and concomitant behavioral deficits in both social and spatial memory. Remarkably, acute chemogenetic inhibition of pyramidal cells successfully corrected memory deficits and did so in a regionally specific manner: ventrally targeted constructs rescued only social behavior, while those expressed dorsally selectively affected spatial memory. Additionally, manipulating activity in control mice could recapitulate the memory deficits in a regionally specific manner. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that retuning activity dysregulation can rescue function in disease-altered circuits, even in the face of a polygenetic haploinsufficiency with a strong developmental component. Targeting circuit excitability in a focal, modular manner may prove to be an effective therapeutic for treatment-resistant symptoms of mental illness.
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