4.5 Review

Developmental vulnerability of synapses and circuits associated with neuropsychiatric disorders

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY
Volume 126, Issue 2, Pages 165-182

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jnc.12261

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; autism; dendritic spine; dopamine; ErbB4; GABAergic interneuron

Funding

  1. NIH [MH071316, MH097216, MH071533, AG027224]
  2. Eunice Shriver Kennedy National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Intramural Research Program
  3. Veterans Health Administration [BX000452]
  4. Comitato Telethon Fondazione Onlus [GGP09196, GGP11095, GGP12097, GGP11116B]
  5. Fondazione CARI-PLO project [2009.264]
  6. Italian Institute of Technology, Seed Grant, Ministry of Health in the frame of ERA-NET NEURON and PNR-CNR Aging Program

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Psychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders, including intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorders (ASD), schizophrenia (SZ), and Alzheimer's disease, pose an immense burden to society. Symptoms of these disorders become manifest at different stages of life: early childhood, adolescence, and late adulthood, respectively. Progress has been made in recent years toward understanding the genetic substrates, cellular mechanisms, brain circuits, and endophenotypes of these disorders. Multiple lines of evidence implicate excitatory and inhibitory synaptic circuits in the cortex and hippocampus as key cellular substrates of pathogenesis in these disorders. Excitatory/inhibitory balance - modulated largely by dopamine - critically regulates cortical network function, neural network activity (i.e. gamma oscillations) and behaviors associated with psychiatric disorders. Understanding the molecular underpinnings of synaptic pathology and neuronal network activity may thus provide essential insight into the pathogenesis of these disorders and can reveal novel drug targets to treat them. Here, we discuss recent genetic, neuropathological, and molecular studies that implicate alterations in excitatory and inhibitory synaptic circuits in the pathogenesis of psychiatric disorders across the lifespan.

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