Data di Pubblicazione:
2008
Citazione:
SNAP-25 negatively modulates voltage-gated calcium channels and network activity / I. Corradini, A.D. Zani, S. Colleoni, M. Caleo, Y. Bozzi, M. Gobbi, D. Braida, M. Sala, C. Verderio, M. Matteoli. ((Intervento presentato al 1. convegno European Synapse Meeting tenutosi a Bordeaux nel 2008.
Abstract:
SNAP25 is a member of the SNARE proteins that participates in synaptic vesicle exocytosis. We previously demonstrated that differential SNAP25 expression in hippocampal neurons regulates
intracellular calcium dynamics (Verderio C. et al., Neuron 2004) and that negative modulation of neuronal voltage-gated calcium channels requires SNAP25 activity-dependent phosphorylation on
Ser187 (Pozzi D. et al., PNAS 2007). A dysregulation of calcium dynamics due to alterations of SNAP25 expression may thus lead to unbalances of neuronal network activity. In line with these
data, alterations of SNAP25 expression have been associated to several neurological diseases, such as schizophrenia (Thompson et al., 1998 and 2003; Young et al., 1998; Karson et al., 1999; Fatemi
et al., 2001; Mukaetova−Ladinska et al., 2002) and ADHD (Faraone S.V. et al., 2006; Kim J.W. et al., 2007; Choi T.K. et al., 2007; Renner T.J. et al., 2008).
In this study we aim to investigate whether reduction or lack of SNAP25 may lead to altered network activity in vitro and in vivo, possibly leading to an epileptic phenotype. This possibility,
previously raised in the coloboma mice model (Zhang Y. et al., 2004), has now been tested using SNAP+/- mice, which, differently from coloboma, display selective reduction of this protein. A
significant increase in calcium responsiveness to depolarization was observed in SNAP25 +/- and -/- neurons in comparison with wild-type neurons; this result was confirmed in synaptosomes
from adult wild-type and heterozygous mice. Behavioural tests on wild-type and SNAP25-heterozygous mice revealed an increased spontaneous motor activity and a deficit in long term memory in
SNAP25+/- mice in comparison with wild-type mice. In vivo electroencephalographic recordings showed a significant increase in the number of spikes in SNAP25 +/- mice. Moreover, these mice
showed a high susceptibility to kainate-induced seizures and a strong sprouting of mossy fibers, which is a marker of spontaneous epileptogenesis in mice after kainate injection.
These data suggest that alterations of SNAP25 expression may contribute to epilepsy, possibly by dysregulating the normal calcium dynamics and thus altering network activity.
Tipologia IRIS:
14 - Intervento a convegno non pubblicato
Elenco autori:
I. Corradini, A.D. Zani, S. Colleoni, M. Caleo, Y. Bozzi, M. Gobbi, D. Braida, M. Sala, C. Verderio, M. Matteoli
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