info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Raising cytosolic Cl− in cerebellar granule cells affects their excitability and vestibulo-ocular learning
Fecha
2012-03-17Registro en:
Seja, Patricia; Schonewille, Martijn; Spitzmaul, Guillermo Federico; Badura, Aleksandra; Klein, Ilse; et al.; Raising cytosolic Cl− in cerebellar granule cells affects their excitability and vestibulo-ocular learning; Embo; Embo Journal; 31; 5; 17-3-2012; 1217-1230
0261-4189
1460-2075
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Seja, Patricia
Schonewille, Martijn
Spitzmaul, Guillermo Federico
Badura, Aleksandra
Klein, Ilse
Rudhard, York
Wisden, William
Hübner, Christian A
De Zeeuw, Chris I
Jentsch, Thomas J
Resumen
Cerebellar cortical throughput involved in motor control comprises granule cells (GCs) and Purkinje cells (PCs), both of which receive inhibitory GABAergic input from interneurons. The GABAergic input to PCs is essential for learning and consolidation of the vestibulo-ocular reflex, but the role of GC excitability remains unclear. We now disrupted the Kcc2 K-Cl cotransporter specifically in either cell type to manipulate their excitability and inhibition by GABA A-receptor Cl - channels. Although Kcc2 may have a morphogenic role in synapse development, Kcc2 disruption neither changed synapse density nor spine morphology. In both GCs and PCs, disruption of Kcc2, but not Kcc3, increased [Cl -] i roughly two-fold. The reduced Cl - gradient nearly abolished GABA-induced hyperpolarization in PCs, but in GCs it merely affected excitability by membrane depolarization. Ablation of Kcc2 from GCs impaired consolidation of long-term phase learning of the vestibulo-ocular reflex, whereas baseline performance, short-term gain-decrease learning and gain consolidation remained intact. These functions, however, were affected by disruption of Kcc2 in PCs. GC excitability plays a previously unknown, but specific role in consolidation of phase learning.