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Cell-type targeted CRISPR/Cas9 Clock knockdown in mouse VTA dopamine neurons alter sleep, behavior, and cellular excitability
Key Points
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a severe psychiatric disease characterized by recurrent mania, depression, and circadian rhythm disruption. Among circadian regulators implicated in mood-related dysfunction, Clock has emerged as a particularly strong mechanistic candidate. However, cell type-specific functions of Clock within mood-relevant circuits remain incompletely defined.
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a severe psychiatric disease characterized by recurrent mania, depression, and circadian rhythm disruption. Among circadian regulators implicated in mood-related dysfunction, Clock has emerged as a particularly strong mechanistic candidate. However, cell type-specific functions of Clock within mood-relevant circuits remain incompletely defined. Here, we developed and applied a Cre-dependent AAV-SaCas9 gene-editing strategy to disrupt Clock selectively in ventral tegmental area dopamine neurons. We first established a rapid in vitro screening pipeline for guide RNA selection that accurately predicted in vivo editing efficiency. We then targeted Clock in vivo using a single AAV-based editing strategy and observed robust titer-dependent reduction of Clock expression, by targeted sequencing, in situ hybridization, and immunohistochemistry. We assessed the functional consequences of Clock disruption across analysis levels, including a behavioral battery, circadian and sleep-wake measurements using EEG and EMG, and electrophysiological recordings. These results establish a practical framework for rapid, cell-type-specific disruption of candidate psychiatric risk genes and provide a mechanistically grounded model for investigating how loss of Clock function in mesolimbic dopaminergic circuits contributes to BD-relevant phenotypes.