4.7 Article

Effects of a patient-derived de novo coding alteration of CACNA1I in mice connect a schizophrenia risk gene with sleep spindle deficits

Journal

TRANSLATIONAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41398-020-0685-1

Keywords

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Categories

Funding

  1. Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research
  2. [R01 MH115045]
  3. [R21 NS110355]
  4. [U54 NS108874]
  5. [R01 HG005827]
  6. [R01 NS098505]
  7. [R01 MH097104]
  8. [IK2 BX002130]
  9. [I01 BX004500]
  10. [I01 BX001356]
  11. [I01 BX002774]
  12. [R01 MH039683]
  13. [T32 HL007901]
  14. [IK2 BX004905]
  15. [P01 HL095491]

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CACNA1I, a schizophrenia risk gene, encodes a subtype of voltage-gated T-type calcium channel Ca(V)3.3. We previously reported that a patient-derived missense de novo mutation (R1346H) of CACNA1I impaired Ca(V)3.3 channel function. Here, we generated Ca(V)3.3-RH knock-in animals, along with mice lacking Ca(V)3.3, to investigate the biological impact of R1346H (RH) variation. We found that RH mutation altered cellular excitability in the thalamic reticular nucleus (TRN), where Ca(V)3.3 is abundantly expressed. Moreover, RH mutation produced marked deficits in sleep spindle occurrence and morphology throughout non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, while Ca(V)3.3 haploinsufficiency gave rise to largely normal spindles. Therefore, mice harboring the RH mutation provide a patient derived genetic model not only to dissect the spindle biology but also to evaluate the effects of pharmacological reagents in normalizing sleep spindle deficits. Importantly, our analyses highlighted the significance of characterizing individual spindles and strengthen the inferences we can make across species over sleep spindles. In conclusion, this study established a translational link between a genetic allele and spindle deficits during NREM observed in schizophrenia patients, representing a key step toward testing the hypothesis that normalizing spindles may be beneficial for schizophrenia patients.

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