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Publication : Homer2 is necessary for EtOH-induced neuroplasticity.

First Author  Szumlinski KK Year  2005
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  25
Issue  30 Pages  7054-61
PubMed ID  16049182 Mgi Jnum  J:100023
Mgi Id  MGI:3586398 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1529-05.2005
Citation  Szumlinski KK, et al. (2005) Homer2 is necessary for EtOH-induced neuroplasticity. J Neurosci 25(30):7054-61
abstractText  Homer proteins are integral to the assembly of proteins regulating glutamate signaling and synaptic plasticity. Constitutive Homer2 gene deletion [knock-out (KO)] and rescue with adeno-associated viral (AAV) transfection of Homer2b was used to demonstrate the importance of Homer proteins in neuroplasticity produced by repeated ethanol (EtOH) administration. Homer2 KO mice avoided drinking high concentrations of EtOH and did not develop place preference or locomotor sensitization after repeated EtOH administration. The deficient behavioral plasticity to EtOH after Homer2 deletion was paralleled by a lack of augmentation in the rise in extracellular dopamine and glutamate elicited by repeated EtOH injections. The genotypic differences in EtOH-induced change in behavior and neurochemistry were essentially reversed by AAV-mediated transfection of Homer2b into accumbens cells including, differences in EtOH preference, locomotor sensitization, and EtOH-induced elevations in extracellular glutamate and dopamine. These data demonstrate a necessary and active role for accumbens Homer2 expression in regulating EtOH-induced behavioral and cellular neuroplasticity.
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