Cell-Specific Spinophilin Function Underlying Striatal Motor Adaptations Associated with Amphetamine-Induced Behavioral Sensitization
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Abstract
Striatal-mediated pathological disease-states such as Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD), Parkinson’s Disease (PD), and psychostimulant drug addiction/abuse are coupled with distinct motor movement abnormalities. In addition, these disorders are associated with perturbed synaptic transmission. Proper synaptic transmission is critical for maintaining neuronal communication. Furthermore, in many striatal-dependent disease-states, the principle striatal neurons, medium spiny neurons (MSNs), exhibit differential perturbations in downstream signaling. Signal transduction pathways that are localized to the glutamatergic post-synaptic density (PSD) of GABAergic MSNs regulate protein phosphorylation in a tightly controlled manner. Alterations in the control of this phosphorylation in striatal MSNs are observed in myriad striatal pathological diseasestates and can give rise to perturbations in synaptic transmission. While serine/threonine kinases obtain substrate specificity, in part, by phosphorylating specific consensus sites, serine/threonine phosphatases such as protein phosphatase 1 (PP1) are much more promiscuous. To obtain substrate selectivity, PP1 associates with targeting proteins. The major targeting protein for PP1 in the PSD of striatal dendritic spines is spinophilin. Spinophilin not only binds PP1, but also concurrently interacts with myriad synaptic proteins. Interestingly, dopamine depletion, an animal model of PD, modulates spinophilin protein-protein interactions in the striatum. However, spinophilin function on basal striatal-mediated motor behaviors such as the rotarod or under hyperdopaminergic states such as those observed following psychostimulant-induced behavioral sensitization are less well characterized. To elucidate spinophilin function more specifically, we have generated multiple transgenic animals that allow for cell type-specific loss of spinophilin as well as cell-specific interrogation of spinophilin protein interactions. Here, I report the functional role of spinophilin in regulating striatal mediated motor behaviors and functional changes associated with amphetamine-induced locomotor sensitization. In addition, we define changes in spinophilin protein-protein interactions that may mediate these behavioral changes. Furthermore, global loss of spinophilin abrogates amphetamine-induced sensitization and plays a critical role in striatal motor learning and performance. The data suggest that the striatal spinophilin protein interactome is upregulated in MSNs following psychostimulant administration. In addition, loss of spinophilin changes protein expression in myriad psychostimulant-mediated striatal adaptations. Taken together the data suggests that spinophilin’s protein-protein interactions in the striatum are obligate for appropriate striatal mediated motor function.