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Altered dendritic spine function and integration in a mouse model of fragile X syndrome

Authors :
Peter C. Kind
Sam A. Booker
Giles E. Hardingham
John T.R. Isaac
Aleksander P. F. Domanski
Owen Dando
David J. A. Wyllie
Adam D. Jackson
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-14 (2019), Booker, S A, Domanski, A P F, Dando, O R, Jackson, A D, Isaac, J T R, Hardingham, G E, Wyllie, D J A & Kind, P C 2019, ' Altered dendritic spine function and integration in a mouse model of fragile X syndrome ', Nature Communications, vol. 10, 4813 (2019) . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-11891-6, Booker, S A, Domanski, A P F, Dando, O R, Jackson, A D, Isaac, J T R, Hardingham, G E, Wyllie, D J A & Kind, P C 2019, ' Altered dendritic spine function and integration in a mouse model of fragile X syndrome ', Nature Communications, vol. 10, 4813 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-11891-6, Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2019.

Abstract

Cellular and circuit hyperexcitability are core features of fragile X syndrome and related autism spectrum disorder models. However, the cellular and synaptic bases of this hyperexcitability have proved elusive. We report in a mouse model of fragile X syndrome, glutamate uncaging onto individual dendritic spines yields stronger single-spine excitation than wild-type, with more silent spines. Furthermore, fewer spines are required to trigger an action potential with near-simultaneous uncaging at multiple spines. This is, in part, from increased dendritic gain due to increased intrinsic excitability, resulting from reduced hyperpolarization-activated currents, and increased NMDA receptor signaling. Using super-resolution microscopy we detect no change in dendritic spine morphology, indicating no structure-function relationship at this age. However, ultrastructural analysis shows a 3-fold increase in multiply-innervated spines, accounting for the increased single-spine glutamate currents. Thus, loss of FMRP causes abnormal synaptogenesis, leading to large numbers of poly-synaptic spines despite normal spine morphology, thus explaining the synaptic perturbations underlying circuit hyperexcitability.<br />Fragile X syndrome and autism spectrum disorders are associated with circuit hyperexcitability, however, its cellular and synaptic bases are not well understood. Here, the authors report abnormal synaptogenesis with an increased prevalence of polysynaptic spines with normal morphology in a mouse model of fragile X.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4882e3461e4f8fa36cb97031a008375d