2016
DOI: 10.1038/npp.2016.282
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Dysregulation of Specialized Delay/Interference-Dependent Working Memory Following Loss of Dysbindin-1A in Schizophrenia-Related Phenotypes

Abstract: Dysbindin-1, a protein that regulates aspects of early and late brain development, has been implicated in the pathobiology of schizophrenia. As the functional roles of the three major isoforms of dysbindin-1, (A, B, and C) remain unknown, we generated a novel mutant mouse, dys-1A, with selective loss of dysbindin-1A and investigated schizophrenia-related phenotypes in both males and females. Loss of dysbindin-1A resulted in heightened initial exploration and disruption in subsequent habituation to a novel envi… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(29 citation statements)
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References 83 publications
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“…Initial phenotypic characterization showed sexually dimorphic phenotypes, with female knockouts (KO) being more reactive to stressful situations and male KO showing increased exploration during initial exposure to a novel environment that may be related to some disruption in habituation and dysregulation of hippocampus-dependent working memory function. No effect of genotype was observed during acquisition or during performance in long-term (olfactory) memory or either a conventional spatial working memory task (spontaneous alternation) or a low-interference delay-dependent working memory task; however, in a highinterference task variant, male KO mutants showed impairment in vulnerability to interference (Petit et al, 2017).…”
Section: Dysbindin-1a Mutant Micementioning
confidence: 91%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Initial phenotypic characterization showed sexually dimorphic phenotypes, with female knockouts (KO) being more reactive to stressful situations and male KO showing increased exploration during initial exposure to a novel environment that may be related to some disruption in habituation and dysregulation of hippocampus-dependent working memory function. No effect of genotype was observed during acquisition or during performance in long-term (olfactory) memory or either a conventional spatial working memory task (spontaneous alternation) or a low-interference delay-dependent working memory task; however, in a highinterference task variant, male KO mutants showed impairment in vulnerability to interference (Petit et al, 2017).…”
Section: Dysbindin-1a Mutant Micementioning
confidence: 91%
“…We have recently described the generation of a genetic mouse model with isoform-specific deletion of dysbindin-1A protein (Petit et al, 2017). Initial phenotypic characterization showed sexually dimorphic phenotypes, with female knockouts (KO) being more reactive to stressful situations and male KO showing increased exploration during initial exposure to a novel environment that may be related to some disruption in habituation and dysregulation of hippocampus-dependent working memory function.…”
Section: Dysbindin-1a Mutant Micementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In fact, genetic association studies show that DTNBP1 polymorphisms influence cognitive and neuroanatomical traits in humans (Ghiani and Dell'angelica, ; Mullin et al, ; Papaleo et al, ). Moreover, mouse and Drosophila dysbindin mutants have pronounced neurological, behavioral, learning, plasticity, and synaptic phenotypes (Cox et al, ; Dickman and Davis, ; Talbot et al, ; Tang et al, ; Carlson et al, ; Ghiani and Dell'angelica, ; Karlsgodt et al, ; Shao et al, ; Gokhale et al, ; Mullin et al, ; Petit et al, ). Although the human genetic association data are compelling arguments against subunits of the BLOC‐1 complex, we believe that, particularly with dysbindin, its status as a risk factor for psychotic disorders is more nuanced, as we describe below.…”
Section: Neurodevelopmental Disorders Associated To Bloc‐1 and Borc Cmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Phenotypic studies conducted in mice mutant for dysbindin‐1 have revealed cognitive deficits, particularly in the domain of working memory, relative to wild‐type controls, although the expression and/or magnitude of these deficits varies depending on genetic background (Takao et al, ; Papaleo et al , ; Petit et al , ). In sdy mutants (containing a deletion mutation in the gene encoding dysbindin‐1) on a DBA background, male homozygous mice demonstrated deficits in long‐term memory (assessed in the Barnes maze), as well as spatial working memory (T‐maze, forced alternation task), in the absence of any genotypic differences across non‐cognitive domains.…”
Section: Mutant Models Of Candidate Risk Genes For Schizophreniamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a more recent study examining the effect of selective deletion of the dysbindin‐1A subtype on schizophrenia‐related measures, no genotypic differences were observed during acquisition or during performance in a low‐interference working memory task (DNMP procedure). However, in a high‐interference variant of the DNMP procedure, male homozygous mutants demonstrated impairment in sensitivity to interference (Petit et al, ). Taken together, these data suggest working memory deficits in dysbindin‐1 mutants; such deficits appear to vary depending on behavioural parameters and involve separate or combined effects of modification of D 2 receptors and glutamatergic processes (Papaleo and Weinberger, ).…”
Section: Mutant Models Of Candidate Risk Genes For Schizophreniamentioning
confidence: 99%