Auts2 deletion involves in DG hypoplasia and social recognition deficit: The developmental and neural circuit mechanisms.
Jun LiXiaoxuan SunYang YouQiongwei LiChengwen WeiLinnan ZhaoMengwen SunHu MengTian ZhangWei-Hua YueLifang WangDai ZhangPublished in: Science advances (2022)
The involvement of genetic risk and the underlying developmental and neural circuit mechanisms in autism-related social deficit are largely unclear. Here, we report that deletion of AUTS2 , a high-susceptibility gene of ASDs, caused postnatal dentate gyrus (DG) hypoplasia, which was closely relevant to social recognition deficit. Furthermore, a previously unknown mechanism for neural cell migration in postnatal DG development was identified, in which Auts2-related signaling played a vital role as the transcription repressor. Moreover, the supramammillary nucleus (SuM)-DG-CA3 neural circuit was found to be involved in social recognition and affected in Auts2 -deleted mice due to DG hypoplasia. Correction of DG-CA3 synaptic transmission by using a pharmacological approach or chemo/optogenetic activation of the SuM-DG circuit restored the social recognition deficit in Auts2 -deleted mice. Our findings demonstrated the vital role of Auts2 in postnatal DG development, and this role was critical for SuM-DG-CA3 neural circuit-mediated social recognition behavior.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- mental health
- cell migration
- preterm infants
- photodynamic therapy
- genome wide
- copy number
- autism spectrum disorder
- transcription factor
- radiation therapy
- type diabetes
- protein kinase
- metabolic syndrome
- squamous cell carcinoma
- intellectual disability
- cancer therapy
- locally advanced
- genome wide identification
- prefrontal cortex