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Publication : Modulation of GABAA receptor signaling increases neurogenesis and suppresses anxiety through NFATc4.

First Author  Quadrato G Year  2014
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  34
Issue  25 Pages  8630-45
PubMed ID  24948817 Mgi Jnum  J:309765
Mgi Id  MGI:6759041 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0047-14.2014
Citation  Quadrato G, et al. (2014) Modulation of GABAA receptor signaling increases neurogenesis and suppresses anxiety through NFATc4. J Neurosci 34(25):8630-45
abstractText  Correlative evidence suggests that GABAergic signaling plays an important role in the regulation of activity-dependent hippocampal neurogenesis and emotional behavior in adult mice. However, whether these are causally linked at the molecular level remains elusive. Nuclear factor of activated T cell (NFAT) proteins are activity-dependent transcription factors that respond to environmental stimuli in different cell types, including hippocampal newborn neurons. Here, we identify NFATc4 as a key activity-dependent transcriptional regulator of GABA signaling in hippocampal progenitor cells via an unbiased high-throughput genome-wide study. Next, we demonstrate that GABAA receptor (GABAAR) signaling modulates hippocampal neurogenesis through NFATc4 activity, which in turn regulates GABRA2 and GABRA4 subunit expression via binding to specific promoter responsive elements, as assessed by ChIP and luciferase assays. Furthermore, we show that selective pharmacological enhancement of GABAAR activity promotes hippocampal neurogenesis via the calcineurin/NFATc4 axis. Importantly, the NFATc4-dependent increase in hippocampal neurogenesis after GABAAR stimulation is required for the suppression of the anxiety response in mice. Together, these data provide a novel molecular insight into the regulation of the anxiety response in mice, suggesting that the GABAAR/NFATc4 axis is a druggable target for the therapy of emotional disorders.
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