AI Article Synopsis

  • Striatal medium spiny neurons (MSNs) are influenced by dopamine to regulate feeding and motor functions, with specific roles of PKA isoforms in MSNs remaining unclear.
  • A study created mice with a dominant-negative RIαB subunit in MSNs, showing that this modification affects PKA activity and leads to abnormal growth and feeding behaviors.
  • Results indicate that the cytoplasmic RI-PKA holoenzyme is essential for gene regulation and the normal physiological functions of MSNs.

Article Abstract

Striatal medium spiny neurons (MSNs) mediate many of the physiological effects of dopamine, including the regulation of feeding and motor behaviors. Dopaminergic inputs from the midbrain modulate MSN excitability through pathways that involve cAMP and protein kinase A (PKA), but the physiological role of specific PKA isoforms in MSN neurons remains poorly understood. One of the major PKA regulatory (R) subunit isoforms expressed in MSNs is RIIβ, which localizes the PKA holoenzyme primarily to dendrites by interaction with AKAP5 and other scaffolding proteins. However, RI (RIα and RIβ) subunits are also expressed in MSNs and the RI holoenzyme has a weaker affinity for most scaffolding proteins and tends to localize in the cell body. We generated mice with selective expression of a dominant-negative RI subunit (RIαB) in striatal MSNs and show that this dominant-negative RIαB localizes to the cytoplasm and specifically inhibits type I PKA activity in the striatum. These mice are normal at birth; however, soon after weaning they exhibit growth retardation and the adult mice are hypophagic, lean, and resistant to high-fat diet-induced hyperphagia and obesity. The RIαB-expressing mice also exhibit decreased locomotor activity and decreased dopamine-regulated CREB phosphorylation and c-fos gene expression in the striatum. Our results demonstrate a critical role for cytoplasmic RI-PKA holoenzyme in gene regulation and the overall physiological function of MSNs.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3972716PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3460-13.2014DOI Listing

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