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Publication : Glutamatergic axon-derived BDNF controls GABAergic synaptic differentiation in the cerebellum.

First Author  Chen AI Year  2016
Journal  Sci Rep Volume  6
Pages  20201 PubMed ID  26830657
Mgi Jnum  J:250918 Mgi Id  MGI:6102546
Doi  10.1038/srep20201 Citation  Chen AI, et al. (2016) Glutamatergic axon-derived BDNF controls GABAergic synaptic differentiation in the cerebellum. Sci Rep 6:20201
abstractText  To study mechanisms that regulate the construction of inhibitory circuits, we examined the role of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in the assembly of GABAergic inhibitory synapses in the mouse cerebellar cortex. We show that within the cerebellum, BDNF-expressing cells are restricted to the internal granular layer (IGL), but that the BDNF protein is present within mossy fibers which originate from cells located outside of the cerebellum. In contrast to deletion of TrkB, the cognate receptor for BDNF, deletion of Bdnf from cerebellar cell bodies alone did not perturb the localization of pre- or postsynaptic constituents at the GABAergic synapses formed by Golgi cell axons on granule cell dendrites within the IGL. Instead, we found that BDNF derived from excitatory mossy fiber endings controls their differentiation. Our findings thus indicate that cerebellar BDNF is derived primarily from excitatory neurons--precerebellar nuclei/spinal cord neurons that give rise to mossy fibers--and promotes GABAergic synapse formation as a result of release from axons. Thus, within the cerebellum the preferential localization of BDNF to axons enhances the specificity through which BDNF promotes GABAergic synaptic differentiation.
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