Cerebellar ataxia and Purkinje cell dysfunction caused by Ca <sup>2+</sup> -activated K <sup>+</sup> channel deficiency

Matthias Sausbier(University of Tübingen), Hua Hu(University of Tübingen), Claudia Arntz(University of Tübingen), Susanne Feil(University of Tübingen), S. Kamm(University of Tübingen), Helmuth Adelsberger(University of Tübingen), Ulrike Sausbier(University of Tübingen), Claudia A. Sailer(University of Tübingen), Robert Feil(University of Tübingen), Franz Hofmann(University of Tübingen), Michael Korth(University of Tübingen), Michael J. Shipston(University of Tübingen), H G Knaus(University of Tübingen), David P Wolfer(University of Tübingen), Christine M. Pedroarena(University of Tübingen), Johan F. Storm(University of Tübingen), Peter Ruth(University of Tübingen)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
June 11, 2004
Cited by 415Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Malfunctions of potassium channels are increasingly implicated as causes of neurological disorders. However, the functional roles of the large-conductance voltage- and Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channel (BK channel), a unique calcium, and voltage-activated potassium channel type have remained elusive. Here we report that mice lacking BK channels (BK(-/-)) show cerebellar dysfunction in the form of abnormal conditioned eye-blink reflex, abnormal locomotion and pronounced deficiency in motor coordination, which are likely consequences of cerebellar learning deficiency. At the cellular level, the BK(-/-) mice showed a dramatic reduction in spontaneous activity of the BK(-/-) cerebellar Purkinje neurons, which generate the sole output of the cerebellar cortex and, in addition, enhanced short-term depression at the only output synapses of the cerebellar cortex, in the deep cerebellar nuclei. The impairing cellular effects caused by the lack of postsynaptic BK channels were found to be due to depolarization-induced inactivation of the action potential mechanism. These results identify previously unknown roles of potassium channels in mammalian cerebellar function and motor control. In addition, they provide a previously undescribed animal model of cerebellar ataxia.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis