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Pentraxins coordinate excitatory synapse maturation and circuit integration of parvalbumin interneurons

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posted on 2025-07-31, 17:27 authored by KA Pelkey, E Barksdale, MT Craig, X Yuan, M Sukumaran, GA Vargish, RM Mitchell, MS Wyeth, RS Petralia, R Chittajallu, R-M Karlsson, HA Cameron, Y Murata, MT Colonnese, PF Worley, CJ McBain
Circuit computation requires precision in the timing, extent, and synchrony of principal cell (PC) firing that is largely enforced by parvalbumin-expressing, fast-spiking interneurons (PVFSIs). To reliably coordinate network activity, PVFSIs exhibit specialized synaptic and membrane properties that promote efficient afferent recruitment such as expression of high-conductance, rapidly gating, GluA4-containing AMPA receptors (AMPARs). We found that PVFSIs upregulate GluA4 during the second postnatal week coincident with increases in the AMPAR clustering proteins NPTX2 and NPTXR. Moreover, GluA4 is dramatically reduced in NPTX2(-/-)/NPTXR(-/-) mice with consequent reductions in PVFSI AMPAR function. Early postnatal NPTX2(-/-)/NPTXR(-/-) mice exhibit delayed circuit maturation with a prolonged critical period permissive for giant depolarizing potentials. Juvenile NPTX2(-/-)/NPTXR(-/-) mice display reduced feedforward inhibition yielding a circuit deficient in rhythmogenesis and prone to epileptiform discharges. Our findings demonstrate an essential role for NPTXs in controlling network dynamics highlighting potential therapeutic targets for disorders with inhibition/excitation imbalances such as schizophrenia.

Funding

Work supported by a PRAT fellowship to M.S.W., an NICHD intramural award to C.J.M., NIDCD intramural research program funding to R.S.P., an NIMH intramural award to H.A.C., NIH grants (PAR-02-059, NS 039156) to P.F.W., and an NIH grant (EY022730) to M.T.C

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This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.

Journal

Neuron

Publisher

Elsevier (Cell Press)

Place published

United States

Language

en

Citation

Vol. 85, pp. 1257 - 1272

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