| Literature DB >> 26687841 |
Yang Zhou1, Tobias Kaiser2, Patrícia Monteiro3, Xiangyu Zhang2, Marie S Van der Goes2, Dongqing Wang2, Boaz Barak2, Menglong Zeng4, Chenchen Li5, Congyi Lu5, Michael Wells6, Aldo Amaya7, Shannon Nguyen7, Michael Lewis7, Neville Sanjana5, Yongdi Zhou8, Mingjie Zhang9, Feng Zhang10, Zhanyan Fu5, Guoping Feng11.
Abstract
Genetic studies have revealed significant overlaps of risk genes among psychiatric disorders. However, it is not clear how different mutations of the same gene contribute to different disorders. We characterized two lines of mutant mice with Shank3 mutations linked to ASD and schizophrenia. We found both shared and distinct synaptic and behavioral phenotypes. Mice with the ASD-linked InsG3680 mutation manifest striatal synaptic transmission defects before weaning age and impaired juvenile social interaction, coinciding with the early onset of ASD symptoms. On the other hand, adult mice carrying the schizophrenia-linked R1117X mutation show profound synaptic defects in prefrontal cortex and social dominance behavior. Furthermore, we found differential Shank3 mRNA stability and SHANK1/2 upregulation in these two lines. These data demonstrate that different alleles of the same gene may have distinct phenotypes at molecular, synaptic, and circuit levels in mice, which may inform exploration of these relationships in human patients.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26687841 PMCID: PMC4754122 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2015.11.023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuron ISSN: 0896-6273 Impact factor: 17.173