Publication | Open Access
Kalirin regulates cortical spine morphogenesis and disease-related behavioral phenotypes
171
Citations
31
References
2009
Year
Synaptic PlasticityCortical Spine MorphogenesisSpinal DisorderNeuroanatomySpine DensityNeurologyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemBiological PsychiatryMolecular NeurobiologyMedicineSynaptic SignalingCellular NeurobiologySpine MorphogenesisKalrn-knockout Mice
Dendritic spine morphogenesis contributes to brain function, cognition, and behavior, and is altered in psychiatric disorders. Kalirin is a brain-specific guanine-nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) for Rac-like GTPases and is a key regulator of spine morphogenesis. Here, we show that KALRN-knockout mice have specific reductions in cortical, but not hippocampal, Rac1 signaling and spine density, and exhibit reduced cortical glutamatergic transmission. These mice exhibit robust deficits in working memory, sociability, and prepulse inhibition, paralleled by locomotor hyperactivity reversible by clozapine in a kalirin-dependent manner. Several of these deficits are delayed and age-dependent. Our study thus links spine morphogenic signaling with age-dependent, delayed, disease-related phenotypes, including cognitive dysfunction.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1