A Genetic Locus Mediating Attentional Processing

Author:

Gershon Z,Bonito-Oliva A,Kanke M,Terceros A,Fak J,Ianone A,Gebrehemedin M,De Marco Garcia NV,Sethupathy P,Rajasethupathy P

Abstract

SummaryAttention is required for most higher-order cognitive functions, but despite extensive and careful study, central unifying principles have been challenging to elicit. To provide a new perspective, we took a forward genetics approach to identify genes with large contributions to attentional performance. We studied 200 genetically diverse mice on measures of pre-attentive processing and through genetic mapping identified a small locus on chromosome 13 (95%CI: 92.22-94.09 Mb), driving substantial variation (19%) in this trait. Further characterization of the locus revealed a causative gene,Homer1a, a synaptic protein, whose down-regulation specifically in prefrontal excitatory cells during a developmental critical period (<p14) led to significant improvements in multiple measures of attentional performance in the adult. Subsequent molecular and physiological studies revealed that prefrontalHomer1down-regulation is associated with GABAergic receptor up-regulation in those same cells and an overall inhibitory tone in prefrontal cortex. This inhibitory tone was relieved during task performance, where large increases in locus-coeruleus (LC) to prefrontal cortex (PFC) coupling led to sustained elevations in PFC activity, specifically prior to cue-onset, predicting short-latency correct responses. Notably high-Homer1a, low-attentional performers, exhibited constantly elevated LC-PFC correlations and PFC response magnitudes both at baseline and during task. Thus, rather than overall increases in neural activity, a scalable dynamic range of LC-PFC coupling and of pre-cue PFC responses supported attentional performance. We thus identify a gene with outsized contributions to attentional performance –Homer1– and link this with prefrontal inhibitory tone as an important component of dynamic task-dependent neuromodulation during attention.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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