| Literature DB >> 36168317 |
Felix B Kleine Borgmann1, Johannes Gräff2, Isabelle M Mansuy3, Nicolas Toni4, Sebastian Jessberger5.
Abstract
Dentate granule cells are born throughout life in the mammalian hippocampus. The integration of newborn neurons into the dentate circuit is activity-dependent, and structural data characterizing synapse formation suggested that the survival of adult-born granule cells is regulated by competition for synaptic partners. Here we tested this hypothesis by using a mouse model with genetically enhanced plasticity of mature granule cells through temporally controlled expression of a nuclear inhibitor of protein phosphatase 1 (NIPP1*). Using thymidine analogues and retrovirus-mediated cell labeling, we show that synaptic integration and subsequent survival of newborn neurons is decreased in NIPP1*-expressing mice, suggesting that newborn neurons compete with preexisting granule cells for stable integration. The data presented here provides experimental evidence for a long-standing hypothesis and suggest cellular competition as a key mechanism regulating the integration and survival of newborn granule cells in the adult mammalian hippocampus.Entities:
Keywords: Hippocampus; Neurogenesis; Synapses; Synaptic Integration; Synaptic Transmission
Year: 2016 PMID: 36168317 PMCID: PMC7613637 DOI: 10.19185/matters.201610000014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Matters Sel ISSN: 2297-9239
Figure 1(A-C) CaMKII-driven NIPP1* expression in mature granule cells does not affect NSPC proliferation.
(A) Genetic approach for conditional, DOX-regulated expression of NIPP1* in mature granule cells. Note that transgene-expressed nuclear GFP (green) is not expressed in newborn, DCX-expressing cells (red, arrows). Scale bar represents 20 μm. (B) Number of proliferating, BrdU-labeled cells (green) is not changed upon DOX treatment in control mice (upper panel) compared to DOX-tg-NIPP1* mice (lower panel). Graphs show quantification. Scale bar represents 50 μm. (C) NIPP1* expression in mature granule cells does not affect early survival and neuronal fate choice as measured using IdU injections 1 week before analysis (shown is an example of an IdU-labeled (red), Prox1-positive (green) cell) in control compared to DOX-tg-NIPP1* mice. Scale bar represents 5 μm. Graphs show quantification.
(D-E) Enhanced plasticity of the mature granule cell circuit impairs survival of newborn neurons. (D) The number of newborn neurons expressing DCX (red) is reduced in DOX-tg-NIPP1* mice (right panel) compared to control mice (left panel). Graphs show quantification of DCX-labeled cells per DG. Scale bar represents 20 μm. (E) The number of newborn neurons, labeled with CldU (red) and expressing NeuN (green), is also reduced as measured using CldU injections 3 weeks before analyses in DOX-tg-NIPP1* mice (lower panel) compared to control mice (upper panel). Scale bar represents 50 μm. Graphs show quantification of CldU-labeled cells per DG. * p <0.05.
(F-H) NIPP Reduced dendritic complexity of newborn neurons 3 weeks after birth that were labeled by retrovirus-based GFP expression (green) in DOX-tg-NIPP1* mice (right panel) compared to control mice (left panel). Scale bar represents 20 μm. Graphs show quantification of dendritic length (left) and branching points (right). (G) Number of spines as measured per μm dendritic length is not altered in DOX-tg-NIPP1* mice (right panel) compared to the control mice (left panel). Scale bar represents 5 μm. Graphs show quantification. (H) Neurons born in the DOX-tg-NIPP1* mice are capable of forming MSBs as analyzed using FIB-SEM. Upper panels show the 3D view of 3 week old newborn neurons identified by viral labeling. Lower image shows 3D reconstruction of a MSB formed by a newborn neuron (green) and an unlabeled granule cell (red) that form a synapse onto an axon (yellow). Scale bar represents 500 nm. **p <0.01, ***p <0.001.