학술논문

GIT1 regulates synaptic structural plasticity underlying learning.
Document Type
Article
Source
PLoS ONE. 3/19/2018, Vol. 13 Issue 3, p1-22. 22p.
Subject
*SCAFFOLD proteins
*ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder
*AMPHETAMINES
*MOTOR ability
*NEUROPLASTICITY
*PHENOTYPES
*GENETICS
*THERAPEUTICS
Language
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
The signaling scaffold protein GIT1 is expressed widely throughout the brain, but its function in vivo remains elusive. Mice lacking GIT1 have been proposed as a model for attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder, due to alterations in basal locomotor activity as well as paradoxical locomotor suppression by the psychostimulant amphetamine. Since we had previously shown that GIT1-knockout mice have normal locomotor activity, here we examined GIT1-deficient mice for ADHD-like behavior in more detail, and find neither hyperactivity nor amphetamine-induced locomotor suppression. Instead, GIT1-deficient mice exhibit profound learning and memory defects and reduced synaptic structural plasticity, consistent with an intellectual disability phenotype. We conclude that loss of GIT1 alone is insufficient to drive a robust ADHD phenotype in distinct strains of mice. In contrast, multiple learning and memory defects have been observed here and in other studies using distinct GIT1-knockout lines, consistent with a predominant intellectual disability phenotype related to altered synaptic structural plasticity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]