Neurodevelopmental deficits and cell-type-specific transcriptomic perturbations in a mouse model of HNRNPU haploinsufficiency.
Sarah A DuggerRyan S DhindsaGabriela De Almeida SampaioAndrew K ResslerElizabeth E RafikianSabrina PetriVerity A LettsJiaJie TeohJunqiang YeSophie ColomboYueqing PengMu YangMichael J BolandWayne N FrankelDavid B GoldsteinPublished in: PLoS genetics (2023)
Heterozygous de novo loss-of-function mutations in the gene expression regulator HNRNPU cause an early-onset developmental and epileptic encephalopathy. To gain insight into pathological mechanisms and lay the potential groundwork for developing targeted therapies, we characterized the neurophysiologic and cell-type-specific transcriptomic consequences of a mouse model of HNRNPU haploinsufficiency. Heterozygous mutants demonstrated global developmental delay, impaired ultrasonic vocalizations, cognitive dysfunction and increased seizure susceptibility, thus modeling aspects of the human disease. Single-cell RNA-sequencing of hippocampal and neocortical cells revealed widespread, yet modest, dysregulation of gene expression across mutant neuronal subtypes. We observed an increased burden of differentially-expressed genes in mutant excitatory neurons of the subiculum-a region of the hippocampus implicated in temporal lobe epilepsy. Evaluation of transcriptomic signature reversal as a therapeutic strategy highlights the potential importance of generating cell-type-specific signatures. Overall, this work provides insight into HNRNPU-mediated disease mechanisms and provides a framework for using single-cell RNA-sequencing to study transcriptional regulators implicated in disease.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- early onset
- gene expression
- rna seq
- mouse model
- temporal lobe epilepsy
- high throughput
- late onset
- dna methylation
- transcription factor
- traumatic brain injury
- genome wide
- endothelial cells
- induced apoptosis
- wild type
- risk factors
- human health
- spinal cord
- spinal cord injury
- risk assessment
- cell proliferation
- cell death
- blood brain barrier