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Publication : Developmental Regulation of KCC2 Phosphorylation Has Long-Term Impacts on Cognitive Function.

First Author  Moore YE Year  2019
Journal  Front Mol Neurosci Volume  12
Pages  173 PubMed ID  31396048
Mgi Jnum  J:289565 Mgi Id  MGI:6433155
Doi  10.3389/fnmol.2019.00173 Citation  Moore YE, et al. (2019) Developmental Regulation of KCC2 Phosphorylation Has Long-Term Impacts on Cognitive Function. Front Mol Neurosci 12:173
abstractText  GABAA receptor-mediated currents shift from excitatory to inhibitory during postnatal brain development in rodents. A postnatal increase in KCC2 protein expression is considered to be the sole mechanism controlling the developmental onset of hyperpolarizing synaptic transmission, but here we identify a key role for KCC2 phosphorylation in the developmental EGABA shift. Preventing phosphorylation of KCC2 in vivo at either residue serine 940 (S940), or at residues threonine 906 and threonine 1007 (T906/T1007), delayed or accelerated the postnatal onset of KCC2 function, respectively. Several models of neurodevelopmental disorders including Rett syndrome, Fragile x and Down's syndrome exhibit delayed postnatal onset of hyperpolarizing GABAergic inhibition, but whether the timing of the onset of hyperpolarizing synaptic inhibition during development plays a role in establishing adulthood cognitive function is unknown; we have used the distinct KCC2-S940A and KCC2-T906A/T1007A knock-in mouse models to address this issue. Altering KCC2 function resulted in long-term abnormalities in social behavior and memory retention. Tight regulation of KCC2 phosphorylation is therefore required for the typical timing of the developmental onset of hyperpolarizing synaptic inhibition, and it plays a fundamental role in the regulation of adulthood cognitive function.
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