4.8 Article

Dopamine D1R-neuron cacna1c deficiency: a new model of extinction therapy-resistant post-traumatic stress

Journal

MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
Volume 26, Issue 6, Pages 2286-2298

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41380-020-0730-8

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Institute of Drug Abuse
  2. Hartwell Foundation
  3. Paul Fund
  4. Brockman Foundation
  5. Elizabeth Ring Mather & William Gwinn Mather Fund
  6. S. Livingston Samuel Mather Trust
  7. G.R. Lincoln Family Foundation
  8. T32 grant from NIDA
  9. TL1 grant from the National Center for Advancing Translation Sciences/NIH
  10. Frank & Blanche Mowrer Memorial Fellowship
  11. Training Program in Free Radical and Radiation Biology from the University of Iowa [T32 CA078586]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Our study demonstrates that mice with mutations in the CACNA1C gene exhibit traits similar to those of patients with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), shedding light on the neural mechanisms underlying PTSD and offering potential new therapeutic targets.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is characterized by persistent fear memory of remote traumatic events, mental re-experiencing of the trauma, long-term cognitive deficits, and PTSD-associated hippocampal dysfunction. Extinction-based therapeutic approaches acutely reduce fear. However, many patients eventually relapse to the original conditioned fear response. Thus, understanding the underlying molecular mechanisms of this condition is critical to developing new treatments for patients. Mutations in the neuropsychiatric risk gene CACNA1C, which encodes the Ca(v)1.2 isoform of the L-type calcium channel, have been implicated in both PTSD and highly comorbid neuropsychiatric conditions, such as anxiety and depression. Here, we report that male mice with global heterozygous loss of cacna1c exhibit exacerbated contextual fear that persists at remote time points (up to 180 days after shock), despite successful acute extinction training, reminiscent of PTSD patients. Because dopamine has been implicated in contextual fear memory, and Ca(v)1.2 is a downstream target of dopamine D1-receptor (D1R) signaling, we next generated mice with specific deletion of cacna1c from D1R-expressing neurons (D1-cacna1c(KO) mice). Notably, D1-cacna1c(KO) mice also show the same exaggerated remote contextual fear, as well as persistently elevated anxiety-like behavior and impaired spatial memory at remote time points, reminiscent of chronic anxiety in treatment-resistant PTSD. We also show that D1-cacna1c(KO) mice exhibit elevated death of young hippocampal neurons, and that treatment with the neuroprotective agent P7C3-A20 eradicates persistent remote fear. Augmenting survival of young hippocampal neurons may thus provide an effective therapeutic approach for promoting durable remission of PTSD, particularly in patients with CACNA1C mutations or other genetic aberrations that impair calcium signaling or disrupt the survival of young hippocampal neurons.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available