| Literature DB >> 24904277 |
Gabriele Deidda1, Ignacio F Bozarth1, Laura Cancedda1.
Abstract
During mammalian ontogenesis, the neurotransmitter GABA is a fundamental regulator of neuronal networks. In neuronal development, GABAergic signaling regulates neural proliferation, migration, differentiation, and neuronal-network wiring. In the adult, GABA orchestrates the activity of different neuronal cell-types largely interconnected, by powerfully modulating synaptic activity. GABA exerts these functions by binding to chloride-permeable ionotropic GABAA receptors and metabotropic GABAB receptors. According to its functional importance during development, GABA is implicated in a number of neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism, Fragile X, Rett syndrome, Down syndrome, schizophrenia, Tourette's syndrome and neurofibromatosis. The strength and polarity of GABAergic transmission is continuously modulated during physiological, but also pathological conditions. For GABAergic transmission through GABAA receptors, strength regulation is achieved by different mechanisms such as modulation of GABAA receptors themselves, variation of intracellular chloride concentration, and alteration in GABA metabolism. In the never-ending effort to find possible treatments for GABA-related neurological diseases, of great importance would be modulating GABAergic transmission in a safe and possibly physiological way, without the dangers of either silencing network activity or causing epileptic seizures. In this review, we will discuss the different ways to modulate GABAergic transmission normally at work both during physiological and pathological conditions. Our aim is to highlight new research perspectives for therapeutic treatments that reinstate natural and physiological brain functions in neuro-pathological conditions.Entities:
Keywords: GABA; GABA metabolism; GABAA receptor; cation chloride cotransporters; neurodevelopmental disorders
Year: 2014 PMID: 24904277 PMCID: PMC4033255 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2014.00119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Summary of GABA.
| Autism spectrum disorders | 15q11–13 duplication mice | Increased gene expression of α5, β3, and γ3 subunits | Dysregulation of interneuron genes | Fatemi et al., |
| CNTNAP2 KO mice | Decreased GABAergic interneurons | GABAA receptor expression abnormalities (usually downregulation) | ||
| Presence of seizures | ||||
| BTBR | Behavioral abnormalities rescued by GABAA α2/α2 agonists | Higher epilepsy rates | ||
| Bumetanide treatment restores aberrant electrophysiology and vocalizations | Improvement of autistic scores after bumetanide treatment | |||
| Planned clinical trials with GABAA agonist AZ7325 ( | ||||
| Fragile X | Fmr1 KO mice | Decreased interneurons and GABAA receptor gene expression | Increased prevalence of epilepsy | D'Hulst et al., |
| Hyper excitability in slices and behavior including increased seizure susceptibility which can all be rescued by GABAA positive modulators | Improvement in autistic and intellectual scores after bumetanide treatment | |||
| Depolarizing GABAergic response rescued by bumetanide | GABAA allosteric modulator Ganaxolone currently in clinical trials ( | |||
| Rett syndrome | MECP2 KO mice | Decrease in GAD65 and abnormal interneuron-related gene expression | GABAA receptor dysregulation | Yamashita et al., |
| Epilepsy in 80% of | ||||
| Decreased inhibition in slices | Breathing abnormalities patients | |||
| Respiratory alterations that are rescued by GABA agonists | ||||
| Down syndrome | Ts65Dn mice | Increased number of interneurons | Decreased GABA levels in fetuses and in children | Pueschel et al., |
| Increased GABAergic signaling, GAD65, GAD67, VGAT all rescued by negative GABAA modulation | Increased seizure susceptibility | |||
| Decreased LTP and cognitive behavioral tasks that can be rescued by GABAA antagonists | GABAA α5 inverse agonist currently in clinical trials ( | |||
| Increased seizure susceptibility | ||||
| Schizophrenia | Non-genetic models: | Decreased GAD65 and GAD67, GAT1 and α, β3, δ subunit mRNA | Deficits in GAD65 and GAD67 as well as in reelin, interneurons, GAT1 and multiple GABAA receptor subunits | Wolkowitz and Pickar, |
| PCP exposition | ||||
| Chronic dopamine (D2) receptor stimulation | Decreased reelin and interneurons | |||
| Social isolation | Decreased pre-pulse inhibition | Some patients respond well to benzodiazepine treatment | Beneyto et al., | |
| Genetic models: | Decreased parvalbumin cells | |||
| DISC1 downregulation | Decreased pre-pulse inhibition | |||
| Erbb4 downregulation | ||||
| GAT1KO | ||||
| Tourette syndrome | Striatum injections of GABAA antagonists in rodents and primates | Induction of motor tics resembling those of patients | Interneuron dysregulation | Kalanithi et al., |
| Abnormal GABAA receptor binding | ||||
| Increased epilepsy | ||||
| Modest tic suppression by GABA acting drugs | ||||
| Neurofibro matosis type 1 | NF1 KO mice | Increased GABAergic release and transmission | Decreased GABA levels | Costa and Silva, |
| Increased epilepsy | ||||
| Deficits in memory and LTP that can be rescued by GABAA antagonists |