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Publication : Dysfunctional behavioral modulation of corticostriatal communication in the R6/2 mouse model of Huntington's disease.

First Author  Hong SL Year  2012
Journal  PLoS One Volume  7
Issue  10 Pages  e47026
PubMed ID  23056565 Mgi Jnum  J:192098
Mgi Id  MGI:5464038 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0047026
Citation  Hong SL, et al. (2012) Dysfunctional behavioral modulation of corticostriatal communication in the R6/2 mouse model of Huntington's disease. PLoS One 7(10):e47026
abstractText  BACKGROUND: In Huntington's disease (HD), motor symptoms develop prior to the widespread loss of neurons in striatum and cerebral cortex. The aim of this study was to examine dysfunctional patterns of corticostriatal communication during spontaneously occurring behaviors in a transgenic mouse model of HD. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Local field potentials (LFPs) were recorded from two closely interconnected areas, motor cortex and dorsal striatum, in wild-type controls (WT, n = 14) and a widely used transgenic HD model (R6/2 mice, n = 12). All mice were between the ages of 7-9 weeks, a critical period of motor symptom development in R6/2s. Recordings were obtained while the mice were behaving freely in an open field. Specific LFP activity was extracted using timestamps for three increasingly demanding motor behaviors: 1) resting; 2) grooming; and 3) active exploration. Power spectral densities (PSD) were obtained for the cortical and striatal LFPs as well as coherence levels and relative phase across the frequency spectrum. In both brain regions, only R6/2s showed high frequency LFP oscillations during rest and grooming. As behavior increased from resting to exploring, corticostriatal synchrony at high frequencies declined in R6/2s, completely opposite to the WT pattern. R6/2s also exhibited nearly in-phase corticostriatal activity (cortex phase leads of approximately 5 degrees ), while the WTs consistently showed cortical phase lags of approximately 20 degrees across all assessed behaviors, indicating a lead role for striatum. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results add to growing evidence for altered communication between cortex and striatum in HD and suggest more generally that increasingly demanding motor behaviors differentially modulate corticostriatal communication. Our data also suggest conduction delays in R6/2 corticostriatal transmission, leading to compensatory speeding of LFP activity, as evidenced by the presence of high frequency LFP oscillations.
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