Barrows Caitlynn M, McCabe Matthew P, Chen Hongmei, Swann John W, Weston Matthew C
University of Vermont, Department of Neurological Sciences, Burlington, Vermont 05405.
Cain Foundation Laboratories, Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute, Houston, Texas 77030, and.
J Neurosci. 2017 Sep 6;37(36):8595-8611. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0878-17.2017. Epub 2017 Jul 27.
Changes in synaptic strength and connectivity are thought to be a major mechanism through which many gene variants cause neurological disease. Hyperactivation of the PI3K-mTOR signaling network, via loss of function of repressors such as PTEN, causes epilepsy in humans and animal models, and altered mTOR signaling may contribute to a broad range of neurological diseases. Changes in synaptic transmission have been reported in animal models of PTEN loss; however, the full extent of these changes, and their effect on network function, is still unknown. To better understand the scope of these changes, we recorded from pairs of mouse hippocampal neurons cultured in a two-neuron microcircuit configuration that allowed us to characterize all four major connection types within the hippocampus. Loss of PTEN caused changes in excitatory and inhibitory connectivity, and these changes were postsynaptic, presynaptic, and transynaptic, suggesting that disruption of PTEN has the potential to affect most connection types in the hippocampal circuit. Given the complexity of the changes at the synaptic level, we measured changes in network behavior after deleting from neurons in an organotypic hippocampal slice network. Slices containing -deleted neurons showed increased recruitment of neurons into network bursts. Importantly, these changes were not confined to -deleted neurons, but involved the entire network, suggesting that the extensive changes in synaptic connectivity rewire the entire network in such a way that promotes a widespread increase in functional connectivity. Homozygous deletion of the gene in neuronal subpopulations in the mouse serves as a valuable model of epilepsy caused by mTOR hyperactivation. To better understand how gene deletions lead to altered neuronal activity, we investigated the synaptic and network effects that occur 1 week after deletion. PTEN loss increased the connectivity of all four types of hippocampal synaptic connections, including two forms of increased inhibition of inhibition, and increased network functional connectivity. These data suggest that single gene mutations that cause neurological diseases such as epilepsy may affect a surprising range of connection types. Moreover, given the robustness of homeostatic plasticity, these diverse effects on connection types may be necessary to cause network phenotypes such as increased synchrony.
突触强度和连接性的变化被认为是许多基因变异导致神经疾病的主要机制。PI3K-mTOR信号网络的过度激活,通过诸如PTEN等抑制因子的功能丧失,在人类和动物模型中引发癫痫,并且mTOR信号的改变可能导致广泛的神经疾病。在PTEN缺失的动物模型中已报道了突触传递的变化;然而,这些变化的全部范围及其对网络功能的影响仍不清楚。为了更好地理解这些变化的范围,我们在以双神经元微电路配置培养的小鼠海马神经元对中进行记录,这种配置使我们能够表征海马体内所有四种主要连接类型。PTEN的缺失导致兴奋性和抑制性连接性的变化,并且这些变化是突触后、突触前和跨突触的,这表明PTEN的破坏有可能影响海马回路中的大多数连接类型。鉴于突触水平变化的复杂性,我们在器官型海马切片网络中从神经元中删除 后测量了网络行为的变化。含有 -缺失神经元的切片显示神经元更多地被募集到网络爆发中。重要的是,这些变化并不局限于 -缺失神经元,而是涉及整个网络,这表明突触连接性的广泛变化以促进功能连接性广泛增加的方式重新连接了整个网络。小鼠神经元亚群中 基因的纯合缺失是由mTOR过度激活引起的癫痫的有价值模型。为了更好地理解基因缺失如何导致神经元活动改变,我们研究了 缺失1周后发生的突触和网络效应。PTEN的缺失增加了所有四种海马突触连接类型的连接性,包括两种形式的抑制性增强,并且增加了网络功能连接性。这些数据表明,导致癫痫等神经疾病的单基因突变可能会影响令人惊讶的一系列连接类型。此外,鉴于稳态可塑性的稳健性,对连接类型的这些不同影响可能是导致诸如同步性增加等网络表型所必需的。