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Browsing by Author "Connor, Steven A"

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    Cognitive Deficits in Calsyntenin-2-deficient Mice Associated with Reduced GABAergic Transmission
    (2016)
    Lipina, Tatiana V
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    Prasad, Tuhina
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    Yokomaku, Daisaku
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    Luo, Lin
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    Connor, Steven A
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    Kawabe, Hiroshi
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    Wang, Yu Tian
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    Brose, Nils  
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    Roder, John C
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    Craig, Ann Marie
    Calsyntenin-2 has an evolutionarily conserved role in cognition. In a human genome-wide screen, the CLSTN2 locus was associated with verbal episodic memory, and expression of human calsyntenin-2 rescues the associative learning defect in orthologous Caenorhabditis elegans mutants. Other calsyntenins promote synapse development, calsyntenin-1 selectively of excitatory synapses and calsyntenin-3 of excitatory and inhibitory synapses. We found that targeted deletion of calsyntenin-2 in mice results in a selective reduction in functional inhibitory synapses. Reduced inhibitory transmission was associated with a selective reduction of parvalbumin interneurons in hippocampus and cortex. Clstn2(-/-) mice showed normal behavior in elevated plus maze, forced swim test, and novel object recognition assays. However, Clstn2(-/-) mice were hyperactive in the open field and showed deficits in spatial learning and memory in the Morris water maze and Barnes maze. These results confirm a function for calsyntenin-2 in cognitive performance and indicate an underlying mechanism that involves parvalbumin interneurons and aberrant inhibitory transmission.
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    Distinct but overlapping roles of LRRTM1 and LRRTM2 in developing and mature hippocampal circuits
    (2022)
    Dhume, Shreya H
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    Connor, Steven A
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    Mills, Fergil
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    Tari, Parisa Karimi
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    Au-Yeung, Sarah HM
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    Karimi, Benjamin
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    Oku, Shinichiro
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    Roppongi, Reiko T
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    Kawabe, Hiroshi
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    Bamji, Shernaz X
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    Siddiqui, Tabrez J
    LRRTMs are postsynaptic cell adhesion proteins that have region-restricted expression in the brain. To determine their role in the molecular organization of synapses in vivo, we studied synapse development and plasticity in hippocampal neuronal circuits in mice lacking both Lrrtm1 and Lrrtm2 . We found that LRRTM1 and LRRTM2 regulate the density and morphological integrity of excitatory synapses on CA1 pyramidal neurons in the developing brain but are not essential for these roles in the mature circuit. Further, they are required for long-term-potentiation in the CA3-CA1 pathway and the dentate gyrus, and for enduring fear memory in both the developing and mature brain. Our data show that LRRTM1 and LRRTM2 regulate synapse development and function in a cell-type and developmental-stage-specific manner, and thereby contribute to the fine-tuning of hippocampal circuit connectivity and plasticity.

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