학술논문

Adult glut3 homozygous null mice survive to demonstrate neural excitability and altered neurobehavioral responses reminiscent of neurodevelopmental disorders
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Biological Psychology
Neurosciences
Psychology
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Behavioral and Social Science
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Mental Health
Brain Disorders
Genetics
Mental health
Neurological
Animals
Behavior
Animal
Brain
Disease Models
Animal
Female
Glucose Transporter Type 3
Male
Mice
Mice
Inbred C57BL
Mice
Knockout
Neurodevelopmental Disorders
Pyramidal Cells
Glutamate-excitatory neurons
Neurodevelopmental disorders
Loss-of-function polymorphisms
Seizure activity
Clinical Sciences
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Biological psychology
Language
Abstract
Since GLUT3 is vital for fueling neurotransmission, we examined in-vivo the adult phenotype carrying the conditional homozygous glut3 gene mutation (KO) in glutamate-excitatory neurons. These KO mice demonstrated sex-specific differences in brain and body weights (p = 0.0001 and p = 0.01 each) with reduced GLUT3 protein in cerebral cortices and brain stem (p = 0.005). In patch clamp studies the glut3 KO mice displayed a shorter latency to and enhanced paroxysmal activity (p = 0.01 and p = 0.015 each) in pyramidal neurons upon application of a GABAA antagonist, supporting hyperexcitability. Further, associated changes in neurobehavior consisted of reduced latency to fall in the rotorod motor test related to incoordination, increased distance traveled in total and periphery versus center in open field testing suggesting hyperactivity with anxiety (p = 0.0013 in male, p = 0.045 in female), reduced time freezing reminiscent of disrupted contextual fear conditioning (p = 0.0033), decreased time in target quadrant seen with spatial cognitive memory water maze testing (p = 0.034), and enhanced sociability particularly for novelty reflecting a lack of inhibition/impulsivity (p = 0.038). Some of these features were equally pronounced in males and females (cognitive) while others were seen in females (anxiety and impulsivity). We conclude that GLUT3 in adult glutamate-excitatory neurons is essential for maintaining neurotransmitory equipoise regulating excitation with maintenance of motor coordination and activity, cognition, spatial memory and normal fear for both contextual events and novelty with tempered sociability. While sex-specificity was forthcoming for some of these behaviors, our findings collectively suggest that loss-of-function glut3 gene mutations or polymorphisms may underlie an endophenotype of attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder.