Synaptic-dependent developmental dysconnectivity in 22q11.2 deletion syndrome

Author:

Alvino F.G.ORCID,Gini S.ORCID,Minetti A.ORCID,Pagani M.ORCID,Sastre-Yagüe D.ORCID,Barsotti N.ORCID,De Guzman E.ORCID,Schleifer C.ORCID,Stuefer A.ORCID,Kushan L.ORCID,Montani C.ORCID,Galbusera A.ORCID,Papaleo F.ORCID,Lombardo M. V.ORCID,Pasqualetti M.ORCID,Bearden C.E.ORCID,Gozzi A.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractChromosome 22q11.2 deletion is among the strongest known genetic risk factors for neuropsychiatric disorders, including autism and schizophrenia. Brain imaging studies have reported disrupted large-scale functional connectivity in people with 22q11 deletion syndrome (22q11DS). However, the significance and biological determinants of these functional alterations remain unclear. Here, we use a cross-species design to investigate the developmental trajectory and neural underpinnings of brain dysconnectivity in 22q11DS. We find that LgDel mice, an established mouse model of 22q11DS, exhibit age-specific patterns of functional MRI (fMRI) dysconnectivity, with widespread fMRI hyper-connectivity in juvenile mice reverting to focal hippocampal hypoconnectivity over puberty. These fMRI connectivity alterations are mirrored by co-occurring developmental alterations in dendritic spine density, and are both transiently normalized by developmental GSK3β inhibition, suggesting a synaptic origin for this phenomenon. Notably, analogous hyper-to hypoconnectivity reconfiguration occurs also in human 22q11DS, where it affects hippocampal and cortical regions spatially enriched for synaptic genes that interact with GSK3β, and autism-relevant transcripts. Functional dysconnectivity in somatomotor components of this network is predictive of age-dependent social alterations in 22q11.2 deletion carriers. Taken together, these findings suggest that synaptic-related mechanisms underlie developmentally mediated functional dysconnectivity in 22q11DS.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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