mTOR-related synaptic pathology causes autism spectrum disorder-associated functional hyperconnectivity.
Marco PaganiNoemi BarsottiAlice BerteroStavros TrakoshisLaura UlysseAndrea LocarnoIeva MiseviciuteAlessia De FeliceCarola CanellaKaustubh SupekarAlberto GalbuseraVinod MenonRaffaella ToniniGustavo DecoMichael V LombardoMassimo PasqualettiAlessandro GozziPublished in: Nature communications (2021)
Postmortem studies have revealed increased density of excitatory synapses in the brains of individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), with a putative link to aberrant mTOR-dependent synaptic pruning. ASD is also characterized by atypical macroscale functional connectivity as measured with resting-state fMRI (rsfMRI). These observations raise the question of whether excess of synapses causes aberrant functional connectivity in ASD. Using rsfMRI, electrophysiology and in silico modelling in Tsc2 haploinsufficient mice, we show that mTOR-dependent increased spine density is associated with ASD -like stereotypies and cortico-striatal hyperconnectivity. These deficits are completely rescued by pharmacological inhibition of mTOR. Notably, we further demonstrate that children with idiopathic ASD exhibit analogous cortical-striatal hyperconnectivity, and document that this connectivity fingerprint is enriched for ASD-dysregulated genes interacting with mTOR or Tsc2. Finally, we show that the identified transcriptomic signature is predominantly expressed in a subset of children with autism, thereby defining a segregable autism subtype. Our findings causally link mTOR-related synaptic pathology to large-scale network aberrations, revealing a unifying multi-scale framework that mechanistically reconciles developmental synaptopathy and functional hyperconnectivity in autism.
Keyphrases
- autism spectrum disorder
- functional connectivity
- resting state
- intellectual disability
- attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
- cell proliferation
- single cell
- metabolic syndrome
- prefrontal cortex
- multiple sclerosis
- type diabetes
- molecular docking
- genome wide
- parkinson disease
- copy number
- dna methylation
- transcription factor
- gene expression
- working memory
- insulin resistance