Deficiency of Shank3 in the Nucleus Accumbens Reveals a Loss of Social-Specific Motivation

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ABSTRACT Deficits in social interaction are a hallmark symptom of autism and other neuropsychiatric disorders. SHANK3 encodes a postsynaptic density scaffold protein and is one of the most common causal genes for autism. SHANK3 protein is highly expressed in the nucleus accumbens (NAc), a critical brain region underlying motivated behavior, including social motivation. We previously reported that global Shank3Δe4–22 deletion mice have decreased motivation for palatable food, increased unilateral social investigation, and show a hypoactive NAc and NAc-connected circuits. We thus developed a new Shank3flox/floxmouse tool to conditionally knockdown SHANK3 in a region-specific manner. We found that knockdown of Shank3 in the NAc decreased social preference in the 3-chamber assay and decreased social motivation in the social conditioned place preference (sCPP) assay. Shank3-NAc deletion did not alter food reward seeking, reciprocal social investigation, or anxiety-like behaviors, that we report in global Shank3Δe4–22 deletion mice. These data establish a novel and specific role of Shank3 in the NAc on social motivation. Competing Interest Statement Competing interests YHJ is a scientific co-founder of Couragene. Inc but this study is unrelated to his role.

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License: CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0