Literature DB >> 8824317

Hippocampal cell responses in mice with a targeted glucocorticoid receptor gene disruption.

W Hesen1, H Karst, O Meijer, T J Cole, W Schmid, E R de Kloet, G Schütz, M Joëls.   

Abstract

Previous studies in rats have shown that cellular properties of hippocampal CA1 neurons are under coordinative control of mineralocorticoid and glucocorticoid receptors (MRs and GRs, respectively). In the present study, we examined electrical properties under conditions of exclusive MR occupation, by using mice with a genetic defect in GRs obtained by homologous recombination techniques. It appeared that in the animals homozygous for the genetic defect, the properties studied, i.e., the voltage-gated Ca currents and responses to serotonin and the cholinergic analog carbachol, resembled the effects observed in adrenalectomized mice, i.e., when no steroid receptors are activated. This may point to the necessity of functional GRs for the development of MR-induced actions. Ca current amplitude and transmitter responses in the heterozygous animals, which combine a reduced amount of GRs in the hippocampus with relatively high circulating levels of corticosterone, were large compared with those in the wild-type controls; this resembles the responses that were observed previously in rats subjected to a very high dose of corticosterone. These findings exemplify the use of GR knockout mice for the study of cellular properties in the brain. Further substantiation of the observations, however, awaits the development of site-specific, inducible GR knockouts.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8824317      PMCID: PMC6579238     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  40 in total

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