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Reelin Regulates Developmental Desynchronization Transition of Neocortical Network Activity.

Mohammad I K HamadObada RabayaAbdalrahim JbaraSolieman DaoudPetya PetrovaBassam R AliMohammed Z AllouhJoachim HerzEckart Förster
Published in: Biomolecules (2024)
During the first and second stages of postnatal development, neocortical neurons exhibit a wide range of spontaneous synchronous activity (SSA). Towards the end of the second postnatal week, the SSA is replaced by a more sparse and desynchronized firing pattern. The developmental desynchronization of neocortical spontaneous neuronal activity is thought to be intrinsically generated, since sensory deprivation from the periphery does not affect the time course of this transition. The extracellular protein reelin controls various aspects of neuronal development through multimodular signaling. However, so far it is unclear whether reelin contributes to the developmental desynchronization transition of neocortical neurons. The present study aims to investigate the role of reelin in postnatal cortical developmental desynchronization using a conditional reelin knockout (Reln cKO ) mouse model. Conditional reelin deficiency was induced during early postnatal development, and Ca 2+ recordings were conducted from organotypic cultures (OTCs) of the somatosensory cortex. Our results show that both wild type (wt) and Reln cKO exhibited an SSA pattern during the early postnatal week. However, at the end of the second postnatal week, wt OTCs underwent a transition to a desynchronized network activity pattern, while Reln cKO activity remained synchronous. This changing activity pattern suggests that reelin is involved in regulating the developmental desynchronization of cortical neuronal network activity. Moreover, the developmental desynchronization impairment observed in Reln cKO was rescued when Reln cKO OTCs were co-cultured with wt OTCs. Finally, we show that the developmental transition to a desynchronized state at the end of the second postnatal week is not dependent on glutamatergic signaling. Instead, the transition is dependent on GABA A R and GABA B R signaling. The results suggest that reelin controls developmental desynchronization through GABA A R and GABA B R signaling.
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