Cho, H;Yoo, T;Moon, H;Kang, H;Yang, Y;Kang, M;Yang, E;Lee, D;Hwang, D;Kim, H;Kim, D;Kim, JY;Kim, E;
PMID: 37365244 | DOI: 10.1038/s41380-023-02129-5
ADNP syndrome, involving the ADNP transcription factor of the SWI/SNF chromatin-remodeling complex, is characterized by developmental delay, intellectual disability, and autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Although Adnp-haploinsufficient (Adnp-HT) mice display various phenotypic deficits, whether these mice display abnormal synaptic functions remain poorly understood. Here, we report synaptic plasticity deficits associated with cognitive inflexibility and CaMKIIα hyperactivity in Adnp-HT mice. These mice show impaired and inflexible contextual learning and memory, additional to social deficits, long after the juvenile-stage decrease of ADNP protein levels to ~10% of the newborn level. The adult Adnp-HT hippocampus shows hyperphosphorylated CaMKIIα and its substrates, including SynGAP1, and excessive long-term potentiation that is normalized by CaMKIIα inhibition. Therefore, Adnp haploinsufficiency in mice leads to cognitive inflexibility involving CaMKIIα hyperphosphorylation and excessive LTP in adults long after its marked expressional decrease in juveniles.
Kim, S;Oh, H;Choi, SH;Yoo, YE;Noh, YW;Cho, Y;Im, GH;Lee, C;Oh, Y;Yang, E;Kim, G;Chung, WS;Kim, H;Kang, H;Bae, Y;Kim, SG;Kim, E;
PMID: 36130507 | DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2022.111398
Myelin transcription factor 1 like (Myt1l), a zinc-finger transcription factor, promotes neuronal differentiation and is implicated in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and intellectual disability. However, it remains unclear whether Myt1l promotes neuronal differentiation in vivo and its deficiency in mice leads to disease-related phenotypes. Here, we report that Myt1l-heterozygous mutant (Myt1l-HT) mice display postnatal age-differential ASD-related phenotypes: newborn Myt1l-HT mice, with strong Myt1l expression, show ASD-like transcriptomic changes involving decreased synaptic gene expression and prefrontal excitatory synaptic transmission and altered righting reflex. Juvenile Myt1l-HT mice, with markedly decreased Myt1l expression, display reverse ASD-like transcriptomes, increased prefrontal excitatory transmission, and largely normal behaviors. Adult Myt1l-HT mice show ASD-like transcriptomes involving astrocytic and microglial gene upregulation, increased prefrontal inhibitory transmission, and behavioral deficits. Therefore, Myt1l haploinsufficiency leads to ASD-related phenotypes in newborn mice, which are temporarily normalized in juveniles but re-appear in adults, pointing to continuing phenotypic changes long after a marked decrease of Myt1l expression in juveniles.
Cheng, S;Butrus, S;Tan, L;Xu, R;Sagireddy, S;Trachtenberg, JT;Shekhar, K;Zipursky, SL;
PMID: 35063073 | DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2021.12.022
The role of postnatal experience in sculpting cortical circuitry, while long appreciated, is poorly understood at the level of cell types. We explore this in the mouse primary visual cortex (V1) using single-nucleus RNA sequencing, visual deprivation, genetics, and functional imaging. We find that vision selectively drives the specification of glutamatergic cell types in upper layers (L) (L2/3/4), while deeper-layer glutamatergic, GABAergic, and non-neuronal cell types are established prior to eye opening. L2/3 cell types form an experience-dependent spatial continuum defined by the graded expression of ∼200 genes, including regulators of cell adhesion and synapse formation. One of these genes, Igsf9b, a vision-dependent gene encoding an inhibitory synaptic cell adhesion molecule, is required for the normal development of binocular responses in L2/3. In summary, vision preferentially regulates the development of upper-layer glutamatergic cell types through the regulation of cell-type-specific gene expression programs.
Retbindin mediates light-damage in mouse retina while its absence leads to premature retinal aging
Experimental eye research
Fan, J;Rajapakse, D;Peterson, K;Lerner, J;Parsa, S;Ponduri, A;Sagar, V;Duncan, T;Dong, L;Wistow, G;
PMID: 34228964 | DOI: 10.1016/j.exer.2021.108698
Vision requires the transport and recycling of the pigment 11-cis retinaldehyde (retinal) between the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and photoreceptors. 11-cis retinal is also required for light-mediated photoreceptor death in dark-adapted mouse eye, probably through overstimulation of rod cells adapted for low light. Retbindin is a photoreceptor-specific protein, of unclear function, that is localized between the RPE and the tips of the photoreceptors. Unexpectedly, young Rtbdn-KO mice, with targeted deletion (KO) of retbindin, showed delayed regeneration of retinal function after bleaching and were strongly resistant to light-induced photoreceptor death. Furthermore, bio-layer interferometry binding studies showed recombinant retbindin had significant affinity for retinoids, most notably 11-cis retinal. This suggests that retbindin mediates light damage, probably through a role in transport of 11-cis retinal. In Rtbdn-KO mice, retinal development was normal, as were amplitudes of rod and cone electroretinograms (ERG) up to 4 months, although implicit times and c-waves were affected. However, with aging, both light- and dark-adapted ERG amplitudes declined significantly and photoreceptor outer segments became disordered, However, in contrast to other reports, there was little retinal degeneration or drop in flavin levels. The RPE developed vacuoles and lipid, protein and calcium deposits reminiscent of age-related macular degeneration. Other signs of premature aging included loss of OPN4+ retinal ganglion cells and activation of microglia. Thus, retbindin plays an unexpected role in the mammalian visual cycle, probably as an adaptation for vision in dim light. It mediates light damage in the dark-adapted eye, but also plays a role in light-adapted responses and in long term retinal homeostasis.