TY - JOUR
T1 - Tmod2 Is a Regulator of Cocaine Responses through Control of Striatal and Cortical Excitability and Drug-Induced Plasticity
AU - Mitra, Arojit
AU - Deats, Sean P.
AU - Dickson, Price E.
AU - Zhu, Jiuhe
AU - Gardin, Justin
AU - Nieman, Brian J.
AU - Mark Henkelman, R.
AU - Tsai, Nien Pei
AU - Chesler, Elissa J.
AU - Zhang, Zhong Wei
AU - Kumar, Vivek
N1 - We thank the members of the Kumar laboratory for their valuable input to this work especially Brain Geuther and Kevin Seburn for proofreading the manuscript and suggesting the layout of the figures. We also thank members of Dr. Zhong-Wei lab including Dr. Guoqiang Hou for helping A.M. in setting up the electrophysiology rig for slice recordings. We thank Avery Lopez for her help with behavioral assay. We thank Delia Hartley for her help with animal husbandry. We thank the entire Knockout Mouse Project team at The Jackson Laboratory\u2014Jacqui White, Steve A. Murray, Robert E. Braun, James Clark, Pamelia Fraungruber, Rose Presby, Zachery Seavey, and Catherine Witmeyer. We thank JAX Scientific Services, including the Genome Technologies Group, and the Center for Biometric Analysis for their valuable contribution. This work was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) grant the National Institutes of Health NIDA U01DA041668, U01DA051235, and R33DA050837 and the Brain and Behavioral Foundation Young Investigator Award to V.K. and 5P50DA039841 to E.J.C.
We thank the members of the Kumar laboratory for their valuable input to this work especially Brain Geuther and Kevin Seburn for proofreading the manuscript and suggesting the layout of the figures. We also thank members of Dr. Zhong-Wei lab including Dr. Guoqiang Hou for helping A.M. in setting up the electrophysiology rig for slice recordings. We thank Avery Lopez for her help with behavioral assay. We thank Delia Hartley for her help with animal husbandry. We thank the entire Knockout Mouse Project team at The Jackson Laboratory\u2014Jacqui White, Steve A. Murray, Robert E. Braun, James Clark, Pamelia Fraungruber, Rose Presby, Zachery Seavey, and Catherine Witmeyer. We thank JAX Scientific Services, including the Genome Technologies Group, and the Center for Biometric Analysis for their valuable contribution. This work was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) grant the National Institutes of Health NIDA U01DA041668, U01DA051235, and R33DA050837 and the Brain and Behavioral Foundation Young Investigator Award to V.K. and 5P50DA039841 to E.J.C. The authors declare no competing financial interests. Correspondence should be addressed to Vivek Kumar at [email protected]. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1389-23.2024 Copyright \u00A9 2024 the authors
PY - 2024/5/1
Y1 - 2024/5/1
N2 - Drugs of abuse induce neuroadaptations, including synaptic plasticity, that are critical for transition to addiction, and genes and pathways that regulate these neuroadaptations are potential therapeutic targets. Tropomodulin 2 (Tmod2) is an actin-regulating gene that plays an important role in synapse maturation and dendritic arborization and has been implicated in substance abuse and intellectual disability in humans. Here, we mine the KOMP2 data and find that Tmod2 knock-out mice show emotionality phenotypes that are predictive of addiction vulnerability. Detailed addiction phenotyping shows that Tmod2 deletion does not affect the acute locomotor response to cocaine administration. However, sensitized locomotor responses are highly attenuated in these knock-outs, indicating perturbed drug-induced plasticity. In addition, Tmod2 mutant animals do not self-administer cocaine indicating lack of hedonic responses to cocaine. Whole-brain MR imaging shows differences in brain volume across multiple regions, although transcriptomic experiments did not reveal perturbations in gene coexpression networks. Detailed electrophysiological characterization of Tmod2 KO neurons showed increased spontaneous firing rate of early postnatal and adult cortical and striatal neurons. Cocaine-induced synaptic plasticity that is critical for sensitization is either missing or reciprocal in Tmod2 KO nucleus accumbens shell medium spiny neurons, providing a mechanistic explanation of the cocaine response phenotypes. Combined, these data, collected from both males and females, provide compelling evidence that Tmod2 is a major regulator of plasticity in the mesolimbic system and regulates the reinforcing and addictive properties of cocaine.
AB - Drugs of abuse induce neuroadaptations, including synaptic plasticity, that are critical for transition to addiction, and genes and pathways that regulate these neuroadaptations are potential therapeutic targets. Tropomodulin 2 (Tmod2) is an actin-regulating gene that plays an important role in synapse maturation and dendritic arborization and has been implicated in substance abuse and intellectual disability in humans. Here, we mine the KOMP2 data and find that Tmod2 knock-out mice show emotionality phenotypes that are predictive of addiction vulnerability. Detailed addiction phenotyping shows that Tmod2 deletion does not affect the acute locomotor response to cocaine administration. However, sensitized locomotor responses are highly attenuated in these knock-outs, indicating perturbed drug-induced plasticity. In addition, Tmod2 mutant animals do not self-administer cocaine indicating lack of hedonic responses to cocaine. Whole-brain MR imaging shows differences in brain volume across multiple regions, although transcriptomic experiments did not reveal perturbations in gene coexpression networks. Detailed electrophysiological characterization of Tmod2 KO neurons showed increased spontaneous firing rate of early postnatal and adult cortical and striatal neurons. Cocaine-induced synaptic plasticity that is critical for sensitization is either missing or reciprocal in Tmod2 KO nucleus accumbens shell medium spiny neurons, providing a mechanistic explanation of the cocaine response phenotypes. Combined, these data, collected from both males and females, provide compelling evidence that Tmod2 is a major regulator of plasticity in the mesolimbic system and regulates the reinforcing and addictive properties of cocaine.
KW - KOMP
KW - MRI
KW - addiction
KW - striatal excitability
KW - synaptic plasticity
KW - transcriptomics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85191962183&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85191962183&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1389-23.2024
DO - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1389-23.2024
M3 - Article
C2 - 38508714
AN - SCOPUS:85191962183
SN - 0270-6474
VL - 44
JO - Journal of Neuroscience
JF - Journal of Neuroscience
IS - 18
M1 - e1389232024
ER -