Mapping the physiological and molecular markers of stress and SSRI antidepressant treatment in S100a10 corticostriatal neurons. Author Derya Sargin, Revathy Chottekalapanda, Kristina Perit, Victoria Yao, Duong Chu, Daniel Sparks, Salina Kalik, Saige Power, Olga Troyanskaya, Eric Schmidt, Paul Greengard, Evelyn Lambe Publication Year 2019 Type Journal Article Abstract In mood disorders, psychomotor and sensory abnormalities are prevalent, disabling, and intertwined with emotional and cognitive symptoms. Corticostriatal neurons in motor and somatosensory cortex are implicated in these symptoms, yet mechanisms of their vulnerability are unknown. Here, we demonstrate that S100a10 corticostriatal neurons exhibit distinct serotonin responses and have increased excitability, compared with S100a10-negative neurons. We reveal that prolonged social isolation disrupts the specific serotonin response which gets restored by chronic antidepressant treatment. We identify cell-type-specific transcriptional signatures in S100a10 neurons that contribute to serotonin responses and strongly associate with psychomotor and somatosensory function. Our studies provide a strong framework to understand the pathogenesis and create new avenues for the treatment of mood disorders. Journal Mol Psychiatry Date Published 08/2019 ISSN Number 1476-5578 DOI 10.1038/s41380-019-0473-6 Alternate Journal Mol. Psychiatry PMCID PMC7031043 PMID 31431686 PubMedPubMed CentralGoogle ScholarBibTeXEndNote X3 XML