Targeted therapy of cognitive deficits in fragile X syndrome.
Alicja PuścianM WiniarskiJ BorowskaS ŁęskiT GórkiewiczM ChaturvediK NowickaM WołyniakJoanna J ChmielewskaT NikolaevK MeyzaM DziembowskaL KaczmarekEwelina KnapskaPublished in: Molecular psychiatry (2022)
Breaking an impasse in finding mechanism-based therapies of neuropsychiatric disorders requires a strategic shift towards alleviating individual symptoms. Here we present a symptom and circuit-specific approach to rescue deficits of reward learning in Fmr1 knockout mice, a model of Fragile X syndrome (FXS), the most common monogenetic cause of inherited mental disability and autism. We use high-throughput, ecologically-relevant automated tests of cognition and social behavior to assess effectiveness of the circuit-targeted injections of designer nanoparticles, loaded with TIMP metalloproteinase inhibitor 1 protein (TIMP-1). Further, to investigate the impact of our therapeutic strategy on neuronal plasticity we perform long-term potentiation recordings and high-resolution electron microscopy. We show that central amygdala-targeted delivery of TIMP-1 designer nanoparticles reverses impaired cognition in Fmr1 knockouts, while having no impact on deficits of social behavior, hence corroborating symptom-specificity of the proposed approach. Moreover, we elucidate the neural correlates of the highly specific behavioral rescue by showing that the applied therapeutic intervention restores functional synaptic plasticity and ultrastructure of neurons in the central amygdala. Thus, we present a targeted, symptom-specific and mechanism-based strategy to remedy cognitive deficits in Fragile X syndrome.
Keyphrases
- high throughput
- electron microscopy
- high resolution
- randomized controlled trial
- cancer therapy
- mental health
- traumatic brain injury
- healthcare
- case report
- functional connectivity
- multiple sclerosis
- systematic review
- mild cognitive impairment
- autism spectrum disorder
- white matter
- drug delivery
- prefrontal cortex
- spinal cord
- patient reported
- physical activity
- mass spectrometry
- intellectual disability
- spinal cord injury
- ultrasound guided
- stress induced
- blood brain barrier
- walled carbon nanotubes