Rabies Virus CVS-N2c[Delta]GStrain Enhances Retrograde Synaptic Transfer and Neuronal Viability

Virally based transsynaptic tracing technologies are powerful experimental tools for neuronal circuit mapping. The glycoprotein-deletion variant of the SAD-B19 vaccine strain rabies virus (RABV) has been the reagent of choice in monosynaptic tracing, since it permits the mapping of synaptic inputs t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuron (Cambridge, Mass.) Mass.), 2016-02, Vol.89 (4), p.711
Hauptverfasser: Reardon, Thomas R, Murray, Andrew J, Turi, Gergely F, Wirblich, Christoph, Croce, Katherine R, Schnell, Matthias J, Jessell, Thomas M, Losonczy, Attila
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Virally based transsynaptic tracing technologies are powerful experimental tools for neuronal circuit mapping. The glycoprotein-deletion variant of the SAD-B19 vaccine strain rabies virus (RABV) has been the reagent of choice in monosynaptic tracing, since it permits the mapping of synaptic inputs to genetically marked neurons. Since its introduction, new helper viruses and reagents that facilitate complementation have enhanced the efficiency of SAD-B19ΔGtranssynaptic transfer, but there has been little focus on improvements to the core RABV strain. Here we generate a new deletion mutant strain, CVS-N2cΔG, and examine its neuronal toxicity and efficiency in directing retrograde transsynaptic transfer. We find that by comparison with SAD-B19ΔG, the CVS-N2cΔGstrain exhibits a reduction in neuronal toxicity and a marked enhancement in transsynaptic neuronal transfer. We conclude that the CVS-N2cΔGstrain provides a more effective means of mapping neuronal circuitry and of monitoring and manipulating neuronal activity in vivo in the mammalian CNS.
ISSN:0896-6273
1097-4199
DOI:10.1016/j.neuron.2016.01.004