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Publication : Anterior thalamic dysfunction underlies cognitive deficits in a subset of neuropsychiatric disease models.

First Author  Roy DS Year  2021
Journal  Neuron Volume  109
Issue  16 Pages  2590-2603.e13
PubMed ID  34197733 Mgi Jnum  J:317610
Mgi Id  MGI:6752439 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2021.06.005
Citation  Roy DS, et al. (2021) Anterior thalamic dysfunction underlies cognitive deficits in a subset of neuropsychiatric disease models. Neuron 109(16):2590-2603.e13
abstractText  Neuropsychiatric disorders are often accompanied by cognitive impairments/intellectual disability (ID). It is not clear whether there are converging mechanisms underlying these debilitating impairments. We found that many autism and schizophrenia risk genes are expressed in the anterodorsal subdivision (AD) of anterior thalamic nuclei, which has reciprocal connectivity with learning and memory structures. CRISPR-Cas9 knockdown of multiple risk genes selectively in AD thalamus led to memory deficits. While the AD is necessary for contextual memory encoding, the neighboring anteroventral subdivision (AV) regulates memory specificity. These distinct functions of AD and AV are mediated through their projections to retrosplenial cortex, using differential mechanisms. Furthermore, knockdown of autism and schizophrenia risk genes PTCHD1, YWHAG, or HERC1 from AD led to neuronal hyperexcitability, and normalization of hyperexcitability rescued memory deficits in these models. This study identifies converging cellular to circuit mechanisms underlying cognitive deficits in a subset of neuropsychiatric disease models.
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