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Publication : CBP and SRF co-regulate dendritic growth and synaptic maturation.

First Author  Del Blanco B Year  2019
Journal  Cell Death Differ Volume  26
Issue  11 Pages  2208-2222
PubMed ID  30850733 Mgi Jnum  J:286136
Mgi Id  MGI:6400165 Doi  10.1038/s41418-019-0285-x
Citation  Del Blanco B, et al. (2019) CBP and SRF co-regulate dendritic growth and synaptic maturation. Cell Death Differ 26(11):2208-2222
abstractText  The CREB-binding protein (CBP) exerts tight control of developmental processes. Here, we investigated the consequences of its selective ablation in newborn neurons. Mice in which CBP was eliminated during neuronal differentiation showed perinatal death and defective diaphragm innervation. Adult-born neurons also showed impaired growth and maturation after inducible and restricted CBP loss in dentate gyrus neuroprogenitors. Consistent with these in vivo findings, cultured neurons displayed impaired outgrowth, immature spines, and deficient activity-dependent synaptic remodeling after CBP ablation. These deficits coincided with broad transcriptional changes affecting genes involved in neuronal growth and plasticity. The affected gene set included many predicted targets of both CBP and the serum response factor (SRF), an activity-regulated transcription factor involved in structural plasticity. Notably, increasing SRF activity in a CBP-independent manner ameliorated the transcriptional, synaptic, and growth defects. These results underscore the relevance of CBP-SRF interactions during neuronal outgrowth and synaptic maturation, and demonstrate that CBP plays an essential role in supporting the gene program underlying the last steps of neuronal differentiation, both during development and in the adult brain.
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