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Publication : Glutamatergic cerebellar neurons differentially contribute to the acquisition of motor and social behaviors.

First Author  van der Heijden ME Year  2023
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  14
Issue  1 Pages  2771
PubMed ID  37188723 Mgi Jnum  J:350052
Mgi Id  MGI:7483796 Doi  10.1038/s41467-023-38475-9
Citation  van der Heijden ME, et al. (2023) Glutamatergic cerebellar neurons differentially contribute to the acquisition of motor and social behaviors. Nat Commun 14(1):2771
abstractText  Insults to the developing cerebellum can cause motor, language, and social deficits. Here, we investigate whether developmental insults to different cerebellar neurons constrain the ability to acquire cerebellar-dependent behaviors. We perturb cerebellar cortical or nuclei neuron function by eliminating glutamatergic neurotransmission during development, and then we measure motor and social behaviors in early postnatal and adult mice. Altering cortical and nuclei neurons impacts postnatal motor control and social vocalizations. Normalizing neurotransmission in cortical neurons but not nuclei neurons restores social behaviors while the motor deficits remain impaired in adults. In contrast, manipulating only a subset of nuclei neurons leaves social behaviors intact but leads to early motor deficits that are restored by adulthood. Our data uncover that glutamatergic neurotransmission from cerebellar cortical and nuclei neurons differentially control the acquisition of motor and social behaviors, and that the brain can compensate for some but not all perturbations to the developing cerebellum.
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