4.6 Article

Dysfunction of KCNK Potassium Channels Impairs Neuronal Migration in the Developing Mouse Cerebral Cortex

Journal

CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume 24, Issue 4, Pages 1017-1029

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhs387

Keywords

activity dependent; calcium; channelopathy; electroporation; mental retardation

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT) of Japan [21700350, 23500388]
  2. MEXT [23123508]
  3. Global Center of Excellence program [A06]
  4. Inamori Foundation
  5. Mochida Memorial Foundation
  6. Naito Foundation
  7. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [23123508, 25115716, 25110717, 21700350, 23500388] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Development of the cerebral cortex depends partly on neural activity, but the identity of the ion channels that might contribute to the activity-dependent cortical development is unknown. KCNK channels are critical determinants of neuronal excitability in the mature cerebral cortex, and a member of the KCNK family, KCNK9, is responsible for a maternally transmitted mental retardation syndrome. Here, we have investigated the roles of KCNK family potassium channels in cortical development. Knockdown of KCNK2, 9, or 10 by RNAi using in utero electroporation impaired the migration of late-born cortical excitatory neurons destined to become Layer II/III neurons. The migration defect caused by KCNK9 knockdown was rescued by coexpression of RNAi-resistant functional KCNK9 mutant. Furthermore, expression of dominant-negative mutant KCNK9, responsible for the disease, and electrophysiological experiments demonstrated that ion channel function was involved in the migration defect. Calcium imaging revealed that KCNK9 knockdown or expression of dominant-negative mutant KCNK9 increased the fraction of neurons showing calcium transients and the frequency of spontaneous calcium transients. Mislocated neurons seen after KCNK9 knockdown stayed in the deep cortical layers, showing delayed morphological maturation. Taken together, our results suggest that dysfunction of KCNK9 causes a migration defect in the cortex via an activity-dependent mechanism.

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