| Literature DB >> 27041500 |
Samuel M Cohen1, Huan Ma2, Kishore V Kuchibhotla3, Brendon O Watson4, György Buzsáki5, Robert C Froemke6, Richard W Tsien7.
Abstract
Properly functional CNS circuits depend on inhibitory interneurons that in turn rely upon activity-dependent gene expression for morphological development, connectivity, and excitatory-inhibitory coordination. Despite its importance, excitation-transcription coupling in inhibitory interneurons is poorly understood. We report that PV+ interneurons employ a novel CaMK-dependent pathway to trigger CREB phosphorylation and gene expression. As in excitatory neurons, voltage-gated Ca(2+) influx through CaV1 channels triggers CaM nuclear translocation via local Ca(2+) signaling. However, PV+ interneurons are distinct in that nuclear signaling is mediated by γCaMKI, not γCaMKII. CREB phosphorylation also proceeds with slow, sigmoid kinetics, rate-limited by paucity of CaMKIV, protecting against saturation of phospho-CREB in the face of higher firing rates and bigger Ca(2+) transients. Our findings support the generality of CaM shuttling to drive nuclear CaMK activity, and they are relevant to disease pathophysiology, insofar as dysfunction of PV+ interneurons and molecules underpinning their excitation-transcription coupling both relate to neuropsychiatric disease.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27041500 PMCID: PMC4866871 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2016.03.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuron ISSN: 0896-6273 Impact factor: 17.173