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Publication : Defects in dendrite and spine maturation and synaptogenesis associated with an anxious-depressive-like phenotype of GABAA receptor-deficient mice.

First Author  Ren Z Year  2015
Journal  Neuropharmacology Volume  88
Pages  171-9 PubMed ID  25107590
Mgi Jnum  J:319097 Mgi Id  MGI:6862707
Doi  10.1016/j.neuropharm.2014.07.019 Citation  Ren Z, et al. (2015) Defects in dendrite and spine maturation and synaptogenesis associated with an anxious-depressive-like phenotype of GABAA receptor-deficient mice. Neuropharmacology 88:171-9
abstractText  Mice that were rendered heterozygous for the gamma2 subunit of GABAA receptors (gamma2(+/-) mice) have been characterized extensively as a model for major depressive disorder. The phenotype of these mice includes behavior indicative of heightened anxiety, despair, and anhedonia, as well as defects in hippocampus-dependent pattern separation, HPA axis hyperactivity and increased responsiveness to antidepressant drugs. The gamma2(+/-) model thereby provides strong support for the GABAergic deficit hypothesis of major depressive disorder. Here we show that gamma2(+/-) mice additionally exhibit specific defects in late stage survival of adult-born hippocampal granule cells, including reduced complexity of dendritic arbors and impaired maturation of synaptic spines. Moreover, cortical gamma2(+/-) neurons cultured in vitro show marked deficits in GABAergic innervation selectively when grown under competitive conditions that may mimic the environment of adult-born hippocampal granule cells. Finally, brain extracts of gamma2(+/-) mice show a numerical but insignificant trend (p = 0.06) for transiently reduced expression of brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) at three weeks of age, which might contribute to the previously reported developmental origin of the behavioral phenotype of gamma2(+/-) mice. The data indicate increasing congruence of the GABAergic, glutamatergic, stress-based and neurotrophic deficit hypotheses of major depressive disorder.
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