Neuron
Volume 95, Issue 3, 2 August 2017, Pages 639-655.e10
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Article
Activity-Dependent Gating of Parvalbumin Interneuron Function by the Perineuronal Net Protein Brevican

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2017.06.028Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • PNN proteins gate classes of neurons to support experience-dependent plasticity

  • The PNN protein Brevican modulates cellular and synaptic plasticity in PV+ cells

  • Brevican levels are dynamically regulated by network activity

  • Brevican is required for normal cognitive function

Summary

Activity-dependent neuronal plasticity is a fundamental mechanism through which the nervous system adapts to sensory experience. Several lines of evidence suggest that parvalbumin (PV+) interneurons are essential in this process, but the molecular mechanisms underlying the influence of experience on interneuron plasticity remain poorly understood. Perineuronal nets (PNNs) enwrapping PV+ cells are long-standing candidates for playing such a role, yet their precise contribution has remained elusive. We show that the PNN protein Brevican is a critical regulator of interneuron plasticity. We find that Brevican simultaneously controls cellular and synaptic forms of plasticity in PV+ cells by regulating the localization of potassium channels and AMPA receptors, respectively. By modulating Brevican levels, experience introduces precise molecular and cellular modifications in PV+ cells that are required for learning and memory. These findings uncover a molecular program through which a PNN protein facilitates appropriate behavioral responses to experience by dynamically gating PV+ interneuron function.

Keywords

Parvalbumin interneurons
inhibitory circuitries
perineuronal nets
synapse maturation
AMPA receptors
Kv channels
learning and memory
plasticity
activity-dependent

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These authors contributed equally

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