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Publication : Ataxia and altered dendritic calcium signaling in mice carrying a targeted null mutation of the calbindin D28k gene.

First Author  Airaksinen MS Year  1997
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  94
Issue  4 Pages  1488-93
PubMed ID  9037080 Mgi Jnum  J:38599
Mgi Id  MGI:85986 Doi  10.1073/pnas.94.4.1488
Citation  Airaksinen MS, et al. (1997) Ataxia and altered dendritic calcium signaling in mice carrying a targeted null mutation of the calbindin D28k gene. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 94(4):1488-93
abstractText  Intracellular calcium-binding proteins are abundantly expressed in many neuronal populations. Previous evidence suggests that calcium-binding proteins can modulate various neuronal properties, presumably by their action as calcium buffers. Tile importance of calcium-binding proteins for nervous system function in an intact integrated system is, however, less clear, To investigate the physiological role of a major endogenous calcium- binding protein, calbindin D28k (calbindin) in vivo, we have generated calbindin null mutant mice by gene targeting. Surprisingly, calbindin deficiency does not affect general parameters of development and behavior or the structure of the nervous system at the light microscopic level. Null mutants are, however, severely impaired in tests of motor coordination, suggesting functional deficits in cerebellar pathways. Purkinje neurons, the only efferent of the cerebellar cortex, and inferior olive neurons, the source of the climbing fiber afferent, have previously been shown to express calbindin, Correlated with this unusual type of ataxia, confocal calcium imaging of Purkinje cells in cerebellar slices revealed marked changes of synaptically evoked postsynaptic calcium transients. Their fast, but not their slow, decay component had larger amplitudes in null mutant than in wild-type mice. We conclude that endogenous calbindin is of crucial importance for integrated nervous system function.
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