en
Scientific article
English

Long-lasting rescue of network and cognitive dysfunction in a genetic schizophrenia model

Published inCell, vol. 178, no. 6, p. 1387-1402.e14
Publication date2019
Abstract

Although sensitizing processes occur earlier, schizophrenia is diagnosed in young adulthood, which suggests that it might involve a pathological transition during late brain development in predisposed individuals. Parvalbumin (PV) interneuron alterations have been noticed, but their role in the disease is unclear. Here we demonstrate that adult LgDel+/- mice, a genetic model of schizophrenia, exhibit PV neuron hypo-recruitment and associated chronic PV neuron plasticity together with network and cognitive deficits. All these deficits can be permanently rescued by chemogenetic activation of PV neurons or D2R antagonist treatments, specifically in the ventral hippocampus (vH) or medial-prefrontal cortex during a late-adolescence-sensitive time window. PV neuron alterations were initially restricted to the hippocampal CA1/subiculum, where they became responsive to treatment in late adolescence. Therefore, progression to disease in schizophrenia-model mice can be prevented by treatments supporting vH-mPFC PV network function during a sensitive time window late in adolescence, suggesting therapeutic strategies to prevent the outbreak of schizophrenia.

Funding
  • European Commission - Writing and editing of memories from acquisition to long-term consolidation [694086]
Citation (ISO format)
MUKHERJEE, Arghya et al. Long-lasting rescue of network and cognitive dysfunction in a genetic schizophrenia model. In: Cell, 2019, vol. 178, n° 6, p. 1387–1402.e14. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2019.07.023
Main files (1)
Article (Published version)
accessLevelRestricted
Identifiers
ISSN of the journal0092-8674
246views
0downloads

Technical informations

Creation09/09/2019 5:17:00 PM
First validation09/09/2019 5:17:00 PM
Update time03/15/2023 9:18:21 PM
Status update03/15/2023 9:18:21 PM
Last indexation01/17/2024 9:15:32 AM
All rights reserved by Archive ouverte UNIGE and the University of GenevaunigeBlack