4.8 Article

Mouse neurexin-1α deletion causes correlated electrophysiological and behavioral changes consistent with cognitive impairments

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0910297106

Keywords

autism; neuroligin; schizophrenia; synaptic cell-adhesion; synapse

Funding

  1. NIMH [R37 MH52804-08, R01 MH081164]
  2. Simons Foundation
  3. Hartwell Foundation
  4. BRAINS for Autism/Debra Caudy and Clay Heighten-Founders
  5. Crystal Charity Ball

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Deletions in the neurexin-1 alpha gene were identified in large-scale unbiased screens for copy-number variations in patients with autism or schizophrenia. To explore the underlying biology, we studied the electrophysiological and behavioral phenotype of mice lacking neurexin-1 alpha. Hippocampal slice physiology uncovered a defect in excitatory synaptic strength in neurexin-1 alpha deficient mice, as revealed by a decrease in miniature excitatory postsynaptic current (EPSC) frequency and in the input-output relation of evoked postsynaptic potentials. This defect was specific for excitatory synaptic transmission, because no change in inhibitory synaptic transmission was observed in the hippocampus. Behavioral studies revealed that, compared with littermate control mice, neurexin-1 alpha deficient mice displayed a decrease in prepulse inhibition, an increase in grooming behaviors, an impairment in nest-building activity, and an improvement in motor learning. However, neurexin-1 alpha deficient mice did not exhibit any obvious changes in social behaviors or in spatial learning. Together, these data indicate that the neurexin-1 alpha deficiency induces a discrete neural phenotype whose extent correlates, at least in part, with impairments observed in human patients.

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