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Publication : Elevated protein synthesis in microglia causes autism-like synaptic and behavioral aberrations.

First Author  Xu ZX Year  2020
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  11
Issue  1 Pages  1797
PubMed ID  32286273 Mgi Jnum  J:287547
Mgi Id  MGI:6405907 Doi  10.1038/s41467-020-15530-3
Citation  Xu ZX, et al. (2020) Elevated protein synthesis in microglia causes autism-like synaptic and behavioral aberrations. Nat Commun 11(1):1797
abstractText  Mutations that inactivate negative translation regulators cause autism spectrum disorders (ASD), which predominantly affect males and exhibit social interaction and communication deficits and repetitive behaviors. However, the cells that cause ASD through elevated protein synthesis resulting from these mutations remain unknown. Here we employ conditional overexpression of translation initiation factor eIF4E to increase protein synthesis in specific brain cells. We show that exaggerated translation in microglia, but not neurons or astrocytes, leads to autism-like behaviors in male mice. Although microglial eIF4E overexpression elevates translation in both sexes, it only increases microglial density and size in males, accompanied by microglial shift from homeostatic to a functional state with enhanced phagocytic capacity but reduced motility and synapse engulfment. Consequently, cortical neurons in the mice have higher synapse density, neuroligins, and excitation-to-inhibition ratio compared to control mice. We propose that functional perturbation of male microglia is an important cause for sex-biased ASD.
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