Login / Signup

The murine ortholog of Kaufman oculocerebrofacial syndrome protein Ube3b regulates synapse number by ubiquitinating Ppp3cc.

Mateusz C AmbrozkiewiczEkaterina BorisovaManuela SchwarkSilvia RipamontiTheres SchaubAlina SmorodchenkoA Ioana WeberHong Jun RheeBekir AltasRüstem YilmazSusanne MuellerLars PiepkornStephen T HoranRachel StraussbergSami ZaqoutOlaf JahnEkrem DereMarta RosárioPhilipp Boehm-SturmGuntram BorckKatrin I WilligJeongSeop RheeVictor TarabykinHiroshi Kawabe
Published in: Molecular psychiatry (2020)
Kaufman oculocerebrofacial syndrome (KOS) is a severe autosomal recessive disorder characterized by intellectual disability, developmental delays, microcephaly, and characteristic dysmorphisms. Biallelic mutations of UBE3B, encoding for a ubiquitin ligase E3B are causative for KOS. In this report, we characterize neuronal functions of its murine ortholog Ube3b and show that Ube3b regulates dendritic branching in a cell-autonomous manner. Moreover, Ube3b knockout (KO) neurons exhibit increased density and aberrant morphology of dendritic spines, altered synaptic physiology, and changes in hippocampal circuit activity. Dorsal forebrain-specific Ube3b KO animals show impaired spatial learning, altered social interactions, and repetitive behaviors. We further demonstrate that Ube3b ubiquitinates the catalytic γ-subunit of calcineurin, Ppp3cc, the overexpression of which phenocopies Ube3b loss with regard to dendritic spine density. This work provides insights into the molecular pathologies underlying intellectual disability-like phenotypes in a genetically engineered mouse model.
Keyphrases