4.8 Review

The genie in the bottle-magnified calcium signaling in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex

Journal

MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
Volume 26, Issue 8, Pages 3684-3700

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41380-020-00973-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [NSF 2015276]
  2. Alzheimer's Association Research Fellowship [AARF-17-533294]
  3. American Federation on Aging Research/Diamond Postdoctoral Fellowship
  4. [R01 AG061190-01]
  5. [R01 MH108643-01]
  6. [R01 MH093354-05]

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Neurons in association cortices are vulnerable in cognitive disorders, with molecular mechanisms for higher cognitive operations leading to dysfunction and neurodegeneration when regulation is lost. Excessive cAMP-calcium signaling can weaken synaptic efficacy and drive neurodegeneration, necessitating tight regulation to prevent cognitive disorders.
Neurons in the association cortices are particularly vulnerable in cognitive disorders such as schizophrenia and Alzheimer's disease, while those in primary visual cortex remain relatively resilient. This review proposes that the special molecular mechanisms needed for higher cognitive operations confer vulnerability to dysfunction, atrophy, and neurodegeneration when regulation is lost due to genetic and/or environmental insults. Accumulating data suggest that higher cortical circuits rely on magnified levels of calcium (from NMDAR, calcium channels, and/or internal release from the smooth endoplasmic reticulum) near the postsynaptic density to promote the persistent firing needed to maintain, manipulate, and store information without bottom-up sensory stimulation. For example, dendritic spines in the primate dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) express the molecular machinery for feedforward, cAMP-PKA-calcium signaling. PKA can drive internal calcium release and promote calcium flow through NMDAR and calcium channels, while in turn, calcium activates adenylyl cyclases to produce more cAMP-PKA signaling. Excessive levels of cAMP-calcium signaling can have a number of detrimental effects: for example, opening nearby K+ channels to weaken synaptic efficacy and reduce neuronal firing, and over a longer timeframe, driving calcium overload of mitochondria to induce inflammation and dendritic atrophy. Thus, calcium-cAMP signaling must be tightly regulated, e.g., by agents that catabolize cAMP or inhibit its production (PDE4, mGluR3), and by proteins that bind calcium in the cytosol (calbindin). Many genetic or inflammatory insults early in life weaken the regulation of calcium-cAMP signaling and are associated with increased risk of schizophrenia (e.g., GRM3). Age-related loss of regulatory proteins which result in elevated calcium-cAMP signaling over a long lifespan can additionally drive tau phosphorylation, amyloid pathology, and neurodegeneration, especially when protective calcium binding proteins are lost from the cytosol. Thus, the genie we need for our remarkable cognitive abilities may make us vulnerable to cognitive disorders when we lose essential regulation.

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