4.7 Article

Hyperactivity of Newborn Pten Knock-out Neurons Results from Increased Excitatory Synaptic Drive

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 35, Issue 3, Pages 943-959

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3144-14.2015

Keywords

autism spectrum disorder; dendritic spine; neuron structure function; Pten; seizure; synaptogenesis

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [5 R01 MH097949, 1 R01 MH099054]
  2. Autism Speaks Pilot [7359]
  3. National Science Foundation [MRI 0922631]
  4. Optical Cellular Imaging Shared Resource
  5. Norris Cotton Cancer Center at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth [5 P30 CA023108]

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Developing neurons must regulate morphology, intrinsic excitability, and synaptogenesis to form neural circuits. When these processes go awry, disorders, including autism spectrum disorder (ASD) or epilepsy, may result. The phosphatase Pten is mutated in some patients having ASD and seizures, suggesting that its mutation disrupts neurological function in part through increasing neuronal activity. Supporting this idea, neuronal knock-out of Pten in mice can cause macrocephaly, behavioral changes similar to ASD, and seizures. However, the mechanisms through which excitability is enhanced following Pten depletion are unclear. Previous studies have separately shown that Pten-depleted neurons can drive seizures, receive elevated excitatory synaptic input, and have abnormal dendrites. We therefore tested the hypothesis that developing Pten-depleted neurons are hyperactive due to increased excitatory synaptogenesis using electrophysiology, calcium imaging, morphological analyses, and modeling. This was accomplished by coinjecting retroviruses to either birthdateor birthdate and knock-out Pten in granule neurons of the murine neonatal dentate gyrus. We found that Pten knock-out neurons, despite a rapid onset of hypertrophy, were more active in vivo. Pten knock-out neurons fired at more hyperpolarized membrane potentials, displayed greater peak spike rates, and were more sensitive to depolarizing synaptic input. The increased sensitivity of Pten knock-out neurons was due, in part, to a higher density of synapses located more proximal to the soma. We determined that increased synaptic drive was sufficient to drive hypertrophic Pten knock-out neurons beyond their altered action potential threshold. Thus, our work contributes a developmental mechanism for the increased activity of Pten-depleted neurons.

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