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Publication : Deletion of Gαq in the telencephalon alters specific neurobehavioral outcomes.

First Author  Graham DL Year  2015
Journal  Synapse Volume  69
Issue  9 Pages  434-45
PubMed ID  25963901 Mgi Jnum  J:244818
Mgi Id  MGI:5913597 Doi  10.1002/syn.21830
Citation  Graham DL, et al. (2015) Deletion of Galphaq in the telencephalon alters specific neurobehavioral outcomes. Synapse 69(9):434-45
abstractText  G(alphaq) -coupled receptors are ubiquitously expressed throughout the brain and body, and it has been shown that these receptors and associated signaling cascades are involved in a number of functional outputs, including motor function and learning and memory. Genetic alterations to G(alphaq) have been implicated in neurodevelopmental disorders such as Sturge-Weber syndrome. Some of these associated disease outcomes have been modeled in laboratory animals, but as G(alphaq) is expressed in all cell types, it is difficult to differentiate the underlying circuitry or causative neuronal population. To begin to address neuronal cell type diversity in G(alphaq) function, we utilized a conditional knockout mouse whereby G(alphaq) was eliminated from telencephalic glutamatergic neurons. Unlike the global G(alphaq) knockout mouse, we found that these conditional knockout mice were not physically different from control mice, nor did they exhibit any gross motor abnormalities. However, similarly to the constitutive knockout animal, G(alphaq) conditional knockout mice demonstrated apparent deficits in spatial working memory. Loss of G(alphaq) from glutamatergic neurons also produced enhanced sensitivity to cocaine-induced locomotion, suggesting that cortical G(alphaq) signaling may limit behavioral responses to psychostimulants. Screening for a variety of markers of forebrain neuronal architecture revealed no obvious differences in the conditional knockouts, suggesting that the loss of G(alphaq) in telencephalic excitatory neurons does not result in major alterations in brain structure or neuronal differentiation. Taken together, our results define specific modulation of spatial working memory and psychostimulant responses through disruptions in G(alphaq) signaling within cerebral cortical glutamatergic neurons.
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