GRID1/GluD1 homozygous variants linked to intellectual disability and spastic paraplegia impair mGlu1/5 receptor signaling and excitatory synapses.
Dévina C UngNicolas PietrancostaElena Baz BadilloBrigitt RauxDaniel TapkenAndjela ZlatanovicAdrien DoridantBen Pode-ShakkedAnnick Raas-RothschildOrly ElpelegBassam Abu-LibdehNasrin HamedMarie-Amélie PaponSylviane MarouillatRose-Anne ThépaultGiovanni StevaninJonathan ElegheertMathieu LetellierMichael HollmannBertrand LambolezLudovic TricoireAnnick ToutainRégine HeppFrédéric LaumonnierPublished in: Molecular psychiatry (2024)
The ionotropic glutamate delta receptor GluD1, encoded by the GRID1 gene, is involved in synapse formation, function, and plasticity. GluD1 does not bind glutamate, but instead cerebellin and D-serine, which allow the formation of trans-synaptic bridges, and trigger transmembrane signaling. Despite wide expression in the nervous system, pathogenic GRID1 variants have not been characterized in humans so far. We report homozygous missense GRID1 variants in five individuals from two unrelated consanguineous families presenting with intellectual disability and spastic paraplegia, without (p.Thr752Met) or with (p.Arg161His) diagnosis of glaucoma, a threefold phenotypic association whose genetic bases had not been elucidated previously. Molecular modeling and electrophysiological recordings indicated that Arg161His and Thr752Met mutations alter the hinge between GluD1 cerebellin and D-serine binding domains and the function of this latter domain, respectively. Expression, trafficking, physical interaction with metabotropic glutamate receptor mGlu1, and cerebellin binding of GluD1 mutants were not conspicuously altered. Conversely, upon expression in neurons of dissociated or organotypic slice cultures, we found that both GluD1 mutants hampered metabotropic glutamate receptor mGlu1/5 signaling via Ca 2+ and the ERK pathway and impaired dendrite morphology and excitatory synapse density. These results show that the clinical phenotypes are distinct entities segregating in the families as an autosomal recessive trait, and caused by pathophysiological effects of GluD1 mutants involving metabotropic glutamate receptor signaling and neuronal connectivity. Our findings unravel the importance of GluD1 receptor signaling in sensory, cognitive and motor functions of the human nervous system.
Keyphrases
- intellectual disability
- autism spectrum disorder
- copy number
- binding protein
- poor prognosis
- genome wide
- endothelial cells
- cerebral palsy
- protein kinase
- signaling pathway
- tyrosine kinase
- gene expression
- upper limb
- mental health
- spinal cord
- dna methylation
- wild type
- functional connectivity
- white matter
- transcription factor