Downregulation of parvalbumin expression in the prefrontal cortex during adolescence causes enduring prefrontal disinhibition in adulthood.
Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: The expression of the calcium binding protein parvalbumin (PV) has been observed in several cortical regions during development in a temporal pattern consistent with increased afferent-dependent activity. In the prefrontal cortex (PFC), PV expression appears last and continues to substantially increase throughout adolescence, yet the significance of this increase remains unclear. Because of the expression of PV in fast-spiking GABAergic interneurons, we hypothesized that PV upregulation during adolescence is necessary to sustain the increase in GABAergic activity observed in the PFC during this period. To test this hypothesis, we utilized an RNAi strategy to directly downregulate PV levels in the PFC during adolescence and examined its impact on prefrontal GABAergic function, plasticity, and associated behaviors during adulthood. The data indicate that a mere 25% reduction of adult PV levels in the PFC was sufficient to reduce local GABAergic transmission onto pyramidal neurons, disrupt prefrontal excitatory-inhibitory balance, and alter processing of afferent information from the ventral hippocampus. Accordingly, these animals displayed an impairment in the level of extinction learning of a trace fear conditioning response, a behavioral paradigm that requires intact PFC-ventral hippocampus connectivity. These results indicate the PV upregulation observed in the PFC during adolescence is necessary for refinement of prefrontal GABAergic function, the absence of which results in immature afferent processing and a hypofunctional state. Importantly, these results suggest there is a critical window of plasticity during which PV upregulation supports the acquisition of mature GABAergic phenotype necessary to sustain adult PFC functions.
SUBMITTER: Caballero A
PROVIDER: S-EPMC7360578 | biostudies-literature |
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
ACCESS DATA