| Literature DB >> 25309333 |
Abstract
Rac GTPases are regulators of the cytoskeleton that play an important role in several aspects of neuronal and brain development. Two distinct Rac GTPases are expressed in the developing nervous system, the widely expressed Rac1 and the neural-specific Rac3 proteins. Recent experimental evidence supports a central role of these two Rac proteins in the development of inhibitory GABAergic interneurons, important modulatory elements of the brain circuitry. The combined inactivation of the genes for the two Rac proteins has profound effects on distinct aspects of interneuron development, and has highlighted a synergistic contribution of the two proteins to the postmitotic maturation of specific populations of cortical and hippocampal interneurons. Rac function is modulated by different types of regulators, and can influence the activity of specific effectors. Some of these proteins have been associated to the development and maturation of interneurons. Cortical interneuron dysfunction is implicated in several neurological and psychiatric diseases characterized by cognitive impairment. Therefore the description of the cellular processes regulated by the Rac GTPases, and the identification of the molecular networks underlying these processes during interneuron development is relevant to the understanding of the role of GABAergic interneurons in cognitive functions.Entities:
Keywords: GEF; Rac GTPase; cortex; effector; hippocampus; interneuron
Year: 2014 PMID: 25309333 PMCID: PMC4174739 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2014.00307
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Figure 1(A) Scheme of distinct developmental phases of postmitotic interneuron maturation: after exiting the cell cycle, the GABAergic precursors leave the GE by migrating tangentially; once they have reached their final destination (cortex and hippocampus), they will switch to radial migration to position properly. GABAergic cells will then continue to mature by developing axon and dendrites, and by forming inhibitory synapses with pyramidal cells and with other interneurons (not shown). Some of the proteins relevant to these processes and described in this review are indicated. (B) Model for the activation of Rac GTPases by extracellular signals important for interneuron migration and maturation. See text for details.
Proteins functionally associated to Rac GTPases and implicated in the development of cortical/hippocampal GABAergic cells.
| Protein | Gene name | Function related to Rac | Link to disease (reference) | Role in GABAergic cell development |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DOCK7 | DOCK7 | Rac GEF | Epileptic encephalopathy (Perrault et al., | Development of Chandelier cells |
| JNK3 | MAPK10/JNK3 | Member of the JNK family kinases activated downstream of Rac | Epileptic encephalopathy (Shoichet et al., | JNK1/JNK2: guidance during interneuron migration into the cortex |
| GIT1 | GIT1 | ArfGAP interacting with PIX family Rac GEFs | ADHD (Won et al., | Unknown: KO affects inhibitory input and PV+ cells |
| Kalirin-7 | KLRN | Rac GEF | Schizophrenia (Hill et al., | Dendritic growth; potentiation of excitatory postsynaptic terminals |
| PAK3 | PAK3 | Effector of Rac/Cdc42 | X-linked mental retardation (Allen et al., | Neuritogenesis, dendritic maturation |