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Protein kinase Cγ in cerebellar Purkinje cells regulates Ca 2+ -activated large-conductance K + channels and motor coordination.

Masashi WatanaveNobutaka TakahashiNobutake HosoiAyumu KonnoHikaru YamamotoHiroyuki YasuiMika KawachiTakuro HoriiYasunori MatsuzakiIzuho HatadaHirokazu Hirai
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
The cerebellum, the site where protein kinase C (PKC) was first discovered, contains the highest amount of PKC in the central nervous system, with PKCγ being the major isoform. Systemic PKCγ-knockout (KO) mice showed impaired motor coordination and deficient pruning of surplus climbing fibers (CFs) from developing cerebellar Purkinje cells (PCs). However, the physiological significance of PKCγ in the mature cerebellum and the cause of motor incoordination remain unknown. Using adeno-associated virus vectors targeting PCs, we showed that impaired motor coordination was restored by re-expression of PKCγ in mature PKCγ-KO mouse PCs in a kinase activity-dependent manner, while normal motor coordination in mature Prkcg fl/fl mice was impaired by the Cre-dependent removal of PKCγ from PCs. Notably, the rescue or removal of PKCγ from mature PKCγ-KO or Prkcg fl/fl mice, respectively, did not affect the CF innervation profile of PCs, suggesting the presence of a mechanism distinct from multiple CF innervation of PCs for the motor defects in PKCγ-deficient mice. We found marked potentiation of Ca 2+ -activated large-conductance K + (BK) channel currents in PKCγ-deficient mice, as compared to wild-type mice, which decreased the membrane resistance, resulting in attenuation of the electrical signal during the propagation and significant alterations of the complex spike waveform. These changes in PKCγ-deficient mice were restored by the rescue of PKCγ or pharmacological suppression of BK channels. Our results suggest that PKCγ is a critical regulator that negatively modulates BK currents in PCs, which significantly influences PC output from the cerebellar cortex and, eventually, motor coordination.
Keyphrases
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