Author:
Williams Luis A.,Ryan Steven J.,Joshi Vaibhav,Lewarch Caitlin,Elder Amy,McManus Owen,Godard Patrice,Sridhar Srinidhi,Jacques Jane,Grooms Jennifer,Fink James J.,Zhang Hongkang,Gillard Michel,Pegurier Cécile,Sabnis Yogesh,André Véronique,Steward Lucinda,Dedeurwaerdere Stefanie,Devinsky Orrin,Wolff Christian,Dempsey Graham T.
Abstract
SUMMARYTuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is a rare genetic disorder caused by mutations in the mTOR pathway genesTSC1orTSC2. TSC can affect multiple organs including the brain, and most patients (75-90%) present with seizures during early childhood and intractable epilepsy throughout life. mTOR inhibitors, part of the current standard of care, lack the optimal characteristics to fully address patient phenotypes. Here, we report on the application of our all-optical electrophysiology platform for phenotypic screening in a human neuronal model of TSC. We used CRISPR/Cas9-isogenicTSC2−/−iPS cell lines to identify disease-associated changes to neuronal morphology, transcript expression and neuronal excitability. We established a robust multiparametric electrophysiological phenotype which we then validated in TSC patient-derived neurons. We used this phenotype to conduct a screen of ∼30,000 small molecule compounds in human iPS cell-derived neurons and identified chemical scaffolds that rescued the functional TSC disease parameters. Confirmed hits may act via different mechanisms than direct mTOR pathway inhibition. This strategy provides molecular starting points for therapeutic development in TSC and a framework for phenotype discovery and drug screening in other neurological disorders.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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