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Glycogen synthase kinase-3 is essential for β-arrestin-2 complex formation and lithium-sensitive behaviors in mice
W. Timothy O’Brien, … , Gerard T. Berry, Peter S. Klein
W. Timothy O’Brien, … , Gerard T. Berry, Peter S. Klein
Published August 8, 2011
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2011;121(9):3756-3762. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI45194.
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Research Article Neuroscience

Glycogen synthase kinase-3 is essential for β-arrestin-2 complex formation and lithium-sensitive behaviors in mice

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Abstract

Lithium is the first-line therapy for bipolar disorder. However, its therapeutic target remains controversial. Candidates include inositol monophosphatases, glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3), and a β-arrestin-2/AKT/protein phosphatase 2A (β-arrestin-2/AKT/PP2A) complex that is known to be required for lithium-sensitive behaviors. Defining the direct target(s) is critical for the development of new therapies and for elucidating the molecular pathogenesis of this major psychiatric disorder. Here, we show what we believe to be a new link between GSK-3 and the β-arrestin-2 complex in mice and propose an integrated mechanism that accounts for the effects of lithium on multiple behaviors. GSK-3β (Gsk3b) overexpression reversed behavioral defects observed in lithium-treated mice and similar behaviors observed in Gsk3b+/– mice. Furthermore, immunoprecipitation of striatial tissue from WT mice revealed that lithium disrupted the β-arrestin-2/Akt/PP2A complex by directly inhibiting GSK-3. GSK-3 inhibitors or loss of one copy of the Gsk3b gene reduced β-arrestin-2/Akt/PP2A complex formation in mice, while overexpression of Gsk3b restored complex formation in lithium-treated mice. Thus, GSK-3 regulates the stability of the β-arrestin-2/Akt/PP2A complex, and lithium disrupts the complex through direct inhibition of GSK-3. We believe these findings reveal a new role for GSK-3 within the β-arrestin complex and demonstrate that GSK-3 is a critical target of lithium in mammalian behaviors.

Authors

W. Timothy O’Brien, Jian Huang, Roberto Buccafusca, Julie Garskof, Alexander J. Valvezan, Gerard T. Berry, Peter S. Klein

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Figure 3

GSK-3 stabilizes the β-arrestin-2/Akt/ PP2A/GSK-3 complex.

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GSK-3 stabilizes the β-arrestin-2/Akt/ PP2A/GSK-3 complex.
(A) Striatal ...
(A) Striatal homogenates from WT mice were exposed to the GSK-3 inhibitors LiCl and 6BIO (or AR-AO14418, Supplemental Figure 6) and subjected to immunoprecipitation with anti-Akt antibody, followed by immunoblotting for PP2A, β-arrestin-2, GSK-3α/β (using an antibody to an epitope in the C terminus; both GSK-3 isoforms were present in the immunoprecipitate, although more GSK-3α was detected than GSK-3β), and Akt. (B) Striatal homogenates were treated with GSK-3 inhibitors, as in A, and then subjected to immunoprecipitation with anti–β-arrestin-2 antibody, followed by immunoblotting for PP2A, Akt, GSK-3α/β, and β-arrestin-2. (C) Complex formation after in vivo inhibition of GSK-3. WT and PrpGsk3bL56 mice were treated with control or lithium for 1 week, while Gsk3b+/– mice received control diet only. Striatum was isolated, and Akt was immunoprecipitated, as in A, followed by immunoblotting for PP2A and Akt (n = 3 mice per group) The experiment was repeated 3 times with similar results. (D) Autoradiographs from 3 experiments were scanned and quantitated using ImageJ ( http://rsbweb.nih.gov/ij/), and mean abundance of each band was normalized to Akt (which did not vary significantly among the samples). *P < 0.05 compared with WT; #P < 0.05 compared with lithium-treated animals. The PP2A/Akt interaction in Gsk3b+/– mice was reduced but did not achieve statistical significance based on the ANOVA with Dunn’s post-hoc test, although a 1-tailed Student’s t test comparing WT with Gsk3b+/– mice showed P = 0.006.

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