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Publication : Changes in striatal procedural memory coding correlate with learning deficits in a mouse model of Huntington disease.

First Author  Cayzac S Year  2011
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  108
Issue  22 Pages  9280-5
PubMed ID  21576479 Mgi Jnum  J:173364
Mgi Id  MGI:5013905 Doi  10.1073/pnas.1016190108
Citation  Cayzac S, et al. (2011) Changes in striatal procedural memory coding correlate with learning deficits in a mouse model of Huntington disease. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 108(22):9280-5
abstractText  In hereditary neurodegenerative Huntington disease (HD), early cognitive impairments before motor deficits have been hypothesized to result from dysfunction in the striatum and cortex before degeneration. To test this hypothesis, we examined the firing properties of single cells and local field activity in the striatum and cortex of pre-motor-symptomatic R6/1 transgenic mice while they were engaged in a procedural learning task, the performance on which typically depends on the integrity of striatum and basal ganglia. Here, we report that a dramatically diminished recruitment of the vulnerable striatal projection cells, but not local interneurons, of R6/1 mice in coding for the task, compared with WT littermates, is associated with severe deficits in procedural learning. In addition, both the striatum and cortex in these mice showed a unique oscillation at high gamma-frequency. These data provide crucial information on the in vivo cellular processes in the corticostriatal pathway through which the HD mutation exerts its effects on cognitive abilities in early HD.
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