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Publication : Cholinergic deficits selectively boost cortical intratelencephalic control of striatum in male Huntington's disease model mice.

First Author  Pancani T Year  2023
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  14
Issue  1 Pages  1398
PubMed ID  36914640 Mgi Jnum  J:338909
Mgi Id  MGI:7445874 Doi  10.1038/s41467-023-36556-3
Citation  Pancani T, et al. (2023) Cholinergic deficits selectively boost cortical intratelencephalic control of striatum in male Huntington's disease model mice. Nat Commun 14(1):1398
abstractText  Huntington's disease (HD) is a progressive, neurodegenerative disease caused by a CAG triplet expansion in huntingtin. Although corticostriatal dysfunction has long been implicated in HD, the determinants and pathway specificity of this pathophysiology are not fully understood. Here, using a male zQ175(+/-) knock-in mouse model of HD we carry out optogenetic interrogation of intratelencephalic and pyramidal tract synapses with principal striatal spiny projection neurons (SPNs). These studies reveal that the connectivity of intratelencephalic, but not pyramidal tract, neurons with direct and indirect pathway SPNs increased in early symptomatic zQ175(+/-) HD mice. This enhancement was attributable to reduced pre-synaptic inhibitory control of intratelencephalic terminals by striatal cholinergic interneurons. Lowering mutant huntingtin selectively in striatal cholinergic interneurons with a virally-delivered zinc finger repressor protein normalized striatal acetylcholine release and intratelencephalic functional connectivity, revealing a node in the network underlying corticostriatal pathophysiology in a HD mouse model.
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