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Effects of Chronic Lithium Treatment on Neuronal Excitability and GABAergic Transmission in an Mutant Mouse Model

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Journal bioRxiv
Date 2023 Nov 14
PMID 37961630
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Abstract

Bipolar disorder (BD) is a common psychiatric disease that can lead to psychosocial disability, decreased quality of life, and high risk for suicide. Genome-wide association studies have shown that the gene is a significant risk factor for BD, but the mechanisms involved in BD pathophysiology are not yet fully understood. Previous work has shown that ankyrin-G, the protein encoded by , stabilizes inhibitory synapses in vivo through its interaction with the GABA receptor-associated protein (GABARAP). We generated a mouse model with a missense p.W1989R mutation in , that abolishes the interaction between ankyrin-G and GABARAP, which leads to reduced inhibitory signaling in the somatosensory cortex and increased pyramidal cell excitability. Humans with the same mutation exhibit BD symptoms, which can be attenuated with lithium therapy. In this study, we describe that chronic treatment of p.W1989R mice with lithium normalizes neuronal excitability in cortical pyramidal neurons and increases inhibitory GABAergic postsynaptic currents. The same outcome in inhibitory transmission was observed when mice were treated with the GSK-3β inhibitor Tideglusib. These results suggest that lithium treatment modulates the excitability of pyramidal neurons in the cerebral cortex by increasing GABAergic neurotransmission, likely via GSK-3 inhibition. In addition to the importance of these findings regarding variants as a risk factor for BD development, this study may have significant implications for treating other psychiatric disorders associated with alterations in inhibitory signaling, such as schizophrenia, autism spectrum disorder, and major depressive disorder.

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