HCN channels are a novel therapeutic target for cognitive dysfunction in Neurofibromatosis type 1

被引:0
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作者
A Omrani
T van der Vaart
E Mientjes
G M van Woerden
M R Hojjati
K W Li
D H Gutmann
C N Levelt
A B Smit
A J Silva
S A Kushner
Y Elgersma
机构
[1] Erasmus Medical Center,Department of Neuroscience
[2] ENCORE Center for Neurodevelopmental Disorders,Department of Pediatrics
[3] Erasmus Medical Center,Department of Physiology
[4] Erasmus Medical Center,Department of Molecular and Cellular Neurobiology
[5] Sophia Children’s Hospital,Department of Neurology
[6] Shahrekord University of Medical Sciences,Department of Molecular Visual Plasticity
[7] CNCR,Department of Neurobiology
[8] Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam,Department of Psychiatry
[9] VU University,undefined
[10] Amsterdam,undefined
[11] Washington University School of Medicine,undefined
[12] Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience,undefined
[13] Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW),undefined
[14] Brain Research Institute,undefined
[15] University of California Los Angeles,undefined
[16] Erasmus Medical Center,undefined
[17] 10Present address: Department of Translational Neuroscience,undefined
[18] Brain Center Rudolf Magnus,undefined
[19] University Medical Center Utrecht,undefined
[20] Utrecht,undefined
[21] The Netherlands.,undefined
来源
Molecular Psychiatry | 2015年 / 20卷
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摘要
Cognitive impairments are a major clinical feature of the common neurogenetic disease neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1). Previous studies have demonstrated that increased neuronal inhibition underlies the learning deficits in NF1, however, the molecular mechanism underlying this cell-type specificity has remained unknown. Here, we identify an interneuron-specific attenuation of hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN) current as the cause for increased inhibition in Nf1 mutants. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that HCN1 is a novel NF1-interacting protein for which loss of NF1 results in a concomitant increase of interneuron excitability. Furthermore, the HCN channel agonist lamotrigine rescued the electrophysiological and cognitive deficits in two independent Nf1 mouse models, thereby establishing the importance of HCN channel dysfunction in NF1. Together, our results provide detailed mechanistic insights into the pathophysiology of NF1-associated cognitive defects, and identify a novel target for clinical drug development.
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页码:1311 / 1321
页数:10
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