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Title: Compensatory alteration of inhibitory synaptic circuits in cerebellum and thalamus of gamma-aminobutyric acid type A receptor alpha1 subunit knockout mice. Author: Kralic JE, Sidler C, Parpan F, Homanics GE, Morrow AL, Fritschy JM. Journal: J Comp Neurol; 2006 Apr 01; 495(4):408-21. PubMed ID: 16485284. Abstract: Targeted deletion of the alpha1 subunit gene results in a profound loss of gamma-aminobutyric acid type A (GABA(A)) receptors in adult mouse brain but has only moderate behavioral consequences. Mutant mice exhibit several adaptations in GABA(A) receptor subunit expression, as measured by Western blotting. By using immunohistochemistry, we investigated here whether these adaptations serve to replace the missing alpha1 subunit or represent compensatory changes in neurons that normally express these subunits. We focused on cerebellum and thalamus and distinguished postsynaptic GABA(A) receptor clusters by their colocalization with gephyrin. In the molecular layer of the cerebellum, alpha1 subunit clusters colocalized with gephyrin disappeared from Purkinje cell dendrites of mutant mice, whereas alpha3 subunit/gephyrin clusters, presumably located on dendrites of Golgi interneurons, increased sevenfold, suggesting profound network reorganization in the absence of the alpha1 subunit. In thalamus, a prominent increase in alpha3 and alpha4 subunit immunoreactivity was evident, but without change in regional distribution. In the ventrobasal complex, which contains primarily postsynaptic alpha1- and extrasynaptic alpha4-GABA(A) receptors, the loss of alpha1 subunit was accompanied by disruption of gamma2 subunit and gephyrin clustering, in spite of the increased alpha4 subunit expression. However, in the reticular nucleus, which lacks alpha1-GABA(A) receptors in wild-type mice, postsynaptic alpha3/gamma2/gephyrin clusters were unaffected. These results demonstrate that adaptive responses in the brain of alpha1(0/0) mice involve reorganization of GABAergic circuits and not merely replacement of the missing alpha1 subunit by another receptor subtype. In addition, clustering of gephyrin at synaptic sites in cerebellum and thalamus appears to be dependent on expression of a GABA(A) receptor subtype localized postsynaptically.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]