The Schizophrenia Susceptibility Gene dysbindin Controls Synaptic Homeostasis

DK Dickman, GW Davis - Science, 2009 - science.org
DK Dickman, GW Davis
Science, 2009science.org
The molecular mechanisms that achieve homeostatic stabilization of neural function remain
largely unknown. To better understand how neural function is stabilized during development
and throughout life, we used an electrophysiology-based forward genetic screen and
assessed the function of more than 250 neuronally expressed genes for a role in the
homeostatic modulation of synaptic transmission in Drosophila. This screen ruled out the
involvement of numerous synaptic proteins and identified a critical function for dysbindin, a …
The molecular mechanisms that achieve homeostatic stabilization of neural function remain largely unknown. To better understand how neural function is stabilized during development and throughout life, we used an electrophysiology-based forward genetic screen and assessed the function of more than 250 neuronally expressed genes for a role in the homeostatic modulation of synaptic transmission in Drosophila. This screen ruled out the involvement of numerous synaptic proteins and identified a critical function for dysbindin, a gene linked to schizophrenia in humans. We found that dysbindin is required presynaptically for the retrograde, homeostatic modulation of neurotransmission, and functions in a dose-dependent manner downstream or independently of calcium influx. Thus, dysbindin is essential for adaptive neural plasticity and may link altered homeostatic signaling with a complex neurological disease.
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