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Publication : Mutations causing syndromic autism define an axis of synaptic pathophysiology.

First Author  Auerbach BD Year  2011
Journal  Nature Volume  480
Issue  7375 Pages  63-8
PubMed ID  22113615 Mgi Jnum  J:178293
Mgi Id  MGI:5298116 Doi  10.1038/nature10658
Citation  Auerbach BD, et al. (2011) Mutations causing syndromic autism define an axis of synaptic pathophysiology. Nature 480(7375):63-8
abstractText  Tuberous sclerosis complex and fragile X syndrome are genetic diseases characterized by intellectual disability and autism. Because both syndromes are caused by mutations in genes that regulate protein synthesis in neurons, it has been hypothesized that excessive protein synthesis is one core pathophysiological mechanism of intellectual disability and autism. Using electrophysiological and biochemical assays of neuronal protein synthesis in the hippocampus of Tsc2(+/-) and Fmr1(-/y) mice, here we show that synaptic dysfunction caused by these mutations actually falls at opposite ends of a physiological spectrum. Synaptic, biochemical and cognitive defects in these mutants are corrected by treatments that modulate metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 in opposite directions, and deficits in the mutants disappear when the mice are bred to carry both mutations. Thus, normal synaptic plasticity and cognition occur within an optimal range of metabotropic glutamate-receptor-mediated protein synthesis, and deviations in either direction can lead to shared behavioural impairments.
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