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Loss of Ca V 1.3 RNA editing enhances mouse hippocampal plasticity, learning, and memory.

Jing ZhaiSheeja NavakkodeSean Qing Zhang YeowKumar KrishnaMui Cheng LiangJoanne Huifen KohRui Xiong WongWei-Ping YuSreedharan SajikumarHua HuangTuck Wah Soong
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
L-type Ca V 1.3 calcium channels are expressed on the dendrites and soma of neurons, and there is a paucity of information about its role in hippocampal plasticity. Here, by genetic targeting to ablate Ca V 1.3 RNA editing, we demonstrate that unedited Ca V 1.3 ΔECS mice exhibited improved learning and enhanced long-term memory, supporting a functional role of RNA editing in behavior. Significantly, the editing paradox that functional recoding of Ca V 1.3 RNA editing sites slows Ca 2+ -dependent inactivation to increase Ca 2+ influx but reduces channel open probability to decrease Ca 2+ influx was resolved. Mechanistically, using hippocampal slice recordings, we provide evidence that unedited Ca V 1.3 channels permitted larger Ca 2+ influx into the hippocampal pyramidal neurons to bolster neuronal excitability, synaptic transmission, late long-term potentiation, and increased dendritic arborization. Of note, RNA editing of the Ca V 1.3 IQ-domain was found to be evolutionarily conserved in mammals, which lends support to the importance of the functional recoding of the Ca V 1.3 channel in brain function.
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