Neurobiology of Disease (Dec 2010)

Does gene deletion of AMPA GluA1 phenocopy features of schizoaffective disorder?

  • Paul J. Fitzgerald,
  • Chris Barkus,
  • Michael Feyder,
  • Lisa M. Wiedholz,
  • Yi-Chyan Chen,
  • Rose-Marie Karlsson,
  • Rodrigo Machado-Vieira,
  • Carolyn Graybeal,
  • Trevor Sharp,
  • Carlos Zarate,
  • Judith Harvey-White,
  • Jing Du,
  • Rolf Sprengel,
  • Peter Gass,
  • David Bannerman,
  • Andrew Holmes

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 40, no. 3
pp. 608 – 621

Abstract

Read online

Glutamatergic dysfunction is strongly implicated in schizophrenia and mood disorders. GluA1 knockout (KO) mice display schizophrenia- and depression-related abnormalities. Here, we asked whether GluA1 KO show mania-related abnormalities. KO were tested for behavior in approach/avoid conflict tests, responses to repeated forced swim exposure, and locomotor responses under stress and after psychostimulant treatment. The effects of rapid dopamine depletion and treatment with lithium or a GSK-3β inhibitor (SB216763) on KO locomotor hyperactivity were tested. Results showed that KO exhibited novelty- and stress-induced locomotor hyperactivity, reduced forced swim immobility and alterations in approach/avoid conflict tests. Psychostimulant treatment and dopamine depletion exacerbated KO locomotor hyperactivity. Lithium, but not SB216763, treatment normalized KO anxiety-related behavior and partially reversed hyperlocomotor behavior, and also reversed elevated prefrontal cortex levels of phospho-MARCKS and phospho-neuromodulin. Collectively, these findings demonstrate mania-related abnormalities in GluA1 KO and, combined with previous findings, suggest this mutant may provide a novel model of features of schizoaffective disorder.

Keywords