inhibitory interneuron
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ines Serra ◽  
Ana Stravs ◽  
Catarina Osorio ◽  
Maria Roa Oyaga ◽  
Martijn Schonewille ◽  
...  

Tuberous sclerosis complex 1 (TSC1) is a tumour suppressor gene that inhibits the mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway. Mutations in TSC1 lead to a rare complex disorder of the same name, in which up to 50% of patients present with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). ASD is a highly prevalent, early-onset neurodevelopmental disorder, characterized by social deficits and repetitive behaviours, although the type and severity of symptoms show wide variability across individuals. Amongst different brain areas proposed to play a role in the development of ASD, the cerebellum is commonly reported to be altered, and cerebellar-specific deletion of Tsc1 in mice is sufficient to induce an ASD-like phenotype. Given that the mTOR pathway is crucial for proper cell replication and migration, this suggests that dysregulation of this pathway, particularly during critical phases of cerebellar development, could contribute to the establishment of ASD. Here, we used a mouse model of TSC to investigate gene and protein expression during embryonic and early postnatal periods of cerebellar development. We found that, at E18 and P7, mRNA levels of the cerebellar inhibitory interneuron marker Pax2 were dysregulated. This was accompanied by changes in the expression of mTOR pathway-related genes and downstream phosphorylation of S6. Differential gene correlation analysis revealed dynamic changes in correlated gene pairs across development, with an overall loss of correlation between mTOR- and cerebellar-related genes in Tsc1 mutants compared to controls. We corroborated the genetic findings by characterizing the mTOR pathway and cerebellar development on protein and cellular levels with Western blot and immunohistochemistry. We found that Pax2-expressing cells were hypertrophic at E18 while, at P7, their number was increased and maturation into parvalbumin-expressing cells delayed. Our findings indicate that E18 and P7 are crucial time points in cerebellar development in mice that are particularly susceptible to mTOR pathway dysregulation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dimitri Rodarie ◽  
Csaba Veraszto ◽  
Yann Roussel ◽  
Michael Reimann ◽  
Daniel Keller ◽  
...  

The mouse brain contains a rich diversity of inhibitory interneuron types that have been characterized by their patterns of gene expression. However, the distribution of these cell types across the mouse brain is still incomplete. We developed a computational method to establish a consensus on the estimate of the densities of different interneuron types across the mouse brain. This method allows the unbiased integration of diverse and disparate datasets into a framework to predict interneuron densities for uncharted brain regions. We constrained our estimates based on previously computed brain-wide neuron density data, gene expression from in situ hybridization image stacks together with a wide range of values reported in the literature. Using optimization, we derived coherent estimates of cell densities for the different interneuron types. We estimated that 20.3% of all neurons in the mouse brain are inhibitory. Among all inhibitory neurons, 18% predominantly express parvalbumin (PV), 16% express somatostatin (SST), 3% express vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), and the remainder 63% belong to the residual GABAergic population. Our pipeline is extensible, allowing new cell types or data to be integrated as they become available. The data, algorithms, software, and results of this pipeline are publicly available and update the Blue Brain Cell Atlas. We find that our density estimations improve as more literature values are integrated. This work therefore leverages the research community to collectively converge on the numbers of each cell type in each brain region.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (11) ◽  
pp. 1134
Author(s):  
Giulia Zanetti ◽  
Andrea Mattarei ◽  
Florigio Lista ◽  
Ornella Rossetto ◽  
Cesare Montecucco ◽  
...  

Tetanus neurotoxin (TeNT) is a protein exotoxin produced by Clostridium tetani that causes the deadly spastic neuroparalysis of tetanus. It consists of a metalloprotease light chain and of a heavy chain linked via a disulphide bond. TeNT binds to the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) and it is retro-axonally transported into vesicular compartments to the spinal cord, where it is released and taken up by inhibitory interneuron. Therein, the catalytic subunit is translocated into the cytoplasm where it cleaves its target protein VAMP-1/2 with consequent blockage of the release of inhibitory neurotransmitters. Vaccination with formaldehyde inactivated TeNT prevents the disease, but tetanus is still present in countries where vaccination coverage is partial. Here, we show that small molecule inhibitors interfering with TeNT trafficking or with the reduction of the interchain disulphide bond block the activity of the toxin in neuronal cultures and attenuate tetanus symptoms in vivo. These findings are relevant for the development of therapeutics against tetanus based on the inhibition of toxin molecules that are being retro-transported to or are already within the spinal cord and are, thus, not accessible to anti-TeNT immunoglobulins.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexei M. Bygrave ◽  
Ayesha Sengupta ◽  
Ella P. Jackert ◽  
Mehroz Ahmed ◽  
Beloved Adenuga ◽  
...  

Synapses in the brain exhibit cell–type–specific differences in basal synaptic transmission and plasticity. Here, we evaluated cell–type–specific differences in the composition of glutamatergic synapses, identifying Btbd11, as an inhibitory interneuron–specific synapse–enriched protein. Btbd11 is highly conserved across species and binds to core postsynaptic proteins including Psd–95. Intriguingly, we show that Btbd11 can undergo liquid–liquid phase separation when expressed with Psd–95, supporting the idea that the glutamatergic post synaptic density in synapses in inhibitory and excitatory neurons exist in a phase separated state. Knockout of Btbd11 from inhibitory interneurons decreased glutamatergic signaling onto parvalbumin–positive interneurons. Further, both in vitro and in vivo, we find that Btbd11 knockout disrupts network activity. At the behavioral level, Btbd11 knockout from interneurons sensitizes mice to pharmacologically induced hyperactivity following NMDA receptor antagonist challenge. Our findings identify a cell–type–specific protein that supports glutamatergic synapse function in inhibitory interneurons–with implication for circuit function and animal behavior.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chia-wei Chang ◽  
Meiling Zhao ◽  
Samantha Grudzien ◽  
Max F Oginsky ◽  
Yexin Yang ◽  
...  

The primary somatosensory cortex (S1) is important for the control of movement as it encodes sensory input from the body periphery and external environment during ongoing movement. Mouse S1 consists of several distinct sensorimotor subnetworks that receive topographically organized cortico-cortical inputs from distant sensorimotor areas, including the secondary somatosensory cortex (S2) and primary motor cortex (M1). The role of the vibrissal S1 area and associated cortical connections during active sensing is well documented, but whether (and if so, how) non-whisker S1 areas are involved in movement control remains relatively unexplored. Here, we demonstrate that unilateral silencing of the non-whisker S1 area in both male and female mice disrupts hind paw movement during locomotion on a rotarod and a runway. S2 and M1 provide major long range inputs to this S1 area. Silencing S2 to non whisker S1 projections alters the hind paw orientation during locomotion while manipulation of the M1 projection has little effect. Using patch clamp recordings in brain slices from male and female mice, we show that S2 projection preferentially innervates inhibitory interneuron subtypes. We conclude that S2 S1 corticocortical interactions mediated by local interneurons are critical for efficient locomotion.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emanuela Zuccaro ◽  
Vanessa Murek ◽  
Kwanho Kim ◽  
Hsu-Hsin Chen ◽  
Sara Mancinelli ◽  
...  

SummaryHuman genetic studies have provided a wealth of information on genetic risk factors associated with neuropsychiatric diseases. However, whether different brain cell types are differentially affected in disease states and when in their development and maturation alterations occur is still poorly understood. Here we generated a longitudinal transcriptional map of excitatory projection neuron (PN) and inhibitory interneuron (IN) subtypes of the cerebral cortex, across a timeline of mouse embryonic and postnatal development, as well as fetal human cortex and human cortical organoids. We found that three types of gene signatures uniquely defined each cortical neuronal subtype: dynamic (developmental), adult (terminal), and constitutive (stable), with individual neuronal subtypes varying in the degree of similarity of their signatures between species. In particular, human callosal projection neurons (CPN) displayed the greatest species divergence, with molecular signatures highly enriched for non-coding, human-specific RNAs. Evaluating the association of neuronal class-specific signatures with neuropsychiatric disease risk genes using linkage disequilibrium score regression showed that schizophrenia risk genes were enriched in CPN identity signatures from human but not mouse cortex. Human cortical organoids confirmed the association with excitatory projection neurons. The data indicate that risk gene enrichment is both species- and cell type-specific. Our study reveals molecular determinants of cortical neuron diversification and identifies human callosal projection neurons as the most species-divergent population and a potentially vulnerable neuronal class in schizophrenia.


Author(s):  
Alexandre Guet-McCreight ◽  
Frances K Skinner

The wide diversity of inhibitory cells across the brain makes them suitable to contribute to network dynamics in specialized fashions. However, the contributions of a particular inhibitory cell type in a behaving animal are challenging to untangle as one needs to both record cellular activities and identify the cell type being recorded. Thus, using computational modeling and theory to predict and hypothesize cell-specific contributions is desirable. Here, we examine potential contributions of interneuron-specific 3 (I-S3) cells - an inhibitory interneuron found in CA1 hippocampus that only targets other inhibitory interneurons - during simulated theta rhythms. We use previously developed multi-compartment models of oriens lacunosum-moleculare (OLM) cells, the main target of I-S3 cells, and explore how I-S3 cell inputs during in vitro and in vivo scenarios contribute to theta. We find that I-S3 cells suppress OLM cell spiking, rather than engender its spiking via post-inhibitory rebound mechanisms, and contribute to theta frequency spike resonance during simulated in vivo scenarios. To elicit recruitment similar to in vitro experiments, inclusion of disinhibited pyramidal cell inputs is necessary, implying that I-S3 cell firing broadens the window for pyramidal cell disinhibition. Using in vivo virtual networks, we show that I-S3 cells contribute to a sharpening of OLM cell recruitment at theta frequencies. Further, shifting the timing of I-S3 cell spiking due to external modulation shifts the timing of the OLM cell firing and thus disinhibitory windows. We propose a specialized contribution of I-S3 cells to create temporally precise coordination of modulation pathways.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Luke Y. Prince ◽  
Matthew M. Tran ◽  
Dorian Grey ◽  
Lydia Saad ◽  
Helen Chasiotis ◽  
...  

AbstractNeurons can carry information with both the synchrony and rate of their spikes. However, it is unknown whether distinct subtypes of neurons are more sensitive to information carried by synchrony versus rate, or vice versa. Here, we address this question using patterned optical stimulation in slices of somatosensory cortex from mouse lines labelling fast-spiking (FS) and regular-spiking (RS) interneurons. We used optical stimulation in layer 2/3 to encode a 1-bit signal using either the synchrony or rate of activity. We then examined the mutual information between this signal and the interneuron responses. We found that for a synchrony encoding, FS interneurons carried more information in the first five milliseconds, while both interneuron subtypes carried more information than excitatory neurons in later responses. For a rate encoding, we found that RS interneurons carried more information after several milliseconds. These data demonstrate that distinct interneuron subtypes in the neocortex have distinct sensitivities to synchrony versus rate codes.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kiran Girdhar ◽  
Gabriel E Hoffman ◽  
Jaroslav Bendl ◽  
Samir Rahman ◽  
Pengfei Dong ◽  
...  

To explore modular organization of chromosomes in schizophrenia (SCZ) and bipolar disorder (BD), we applied 'population-scale' correlational structuring of 739 histone H3-lysine 27 acetylation and H3-lysine 4 trimethylation profiles, generated from the prefrontal cortex (PFC) of 568 cases and controls. Neuronal histone acetylomes and methylomes assembled as thousands of cis-regulatory domains (CRDs), revealing fine-grained, kilo- to megabase scale chromatin organization at higher resolution but firmly integrated into Hi-C chromosomal conformations. Large clusters of domains that were hyperacetylated in disease shared spatial positioning within the nucleus, predominantly regulating PFC projection neuron function and excitatory neurotransmission. Hypoacetylated domains were linked to inhibitory interneuron- and myelination-relevant genes. Chromosomal modular architecture is affected in SCZ and BD, with hyperacetylated domains showing unexpectedly strong convergences defined by cell type, nuclear topography, genetic risk, and active chromatin state across a wide developmental window.


Cell Reports ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 34 (13) ◽  
pp. 108904 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christelle Cadilhac ◽  
Isabelle Bachy ◽  
Antoine Forget ◽  
David J. Hodson ◽  
Céline Jahannault-Talignani ◽  
...  

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