| Literature DB >> 30237867 |
Emily A Brown1, Jonathan D Lautz1, Tessa R Davis2,3, Edward P Gniffke1, Alison A W VanSchoiack1,4, Steven C Neier2,5,6,7, Noah Tashbook1, Chiara Nicolini8, Margaret Fahnestock8, Adam G Schrum9, Stephen E P Smith1,10.
Abstract
Background: Autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) are a heterogeneous group of behaviorally defined disorders and are associated with hundreds of rare genetic mutations and several environmental risk factors. Mouse models of specific risk factors have been successful in identifying molecular mechanisms associated with a given factor. However, comparisons among different models to elucidate underlying common pathways or to define clusters of biologically relevant disease subtypes have been complicated by different methodological approaches or different brain regions examined by the labs that developed each model. Here, we use a novel proteomic technique, quantitative multiplex co-immunoprecipitation or QMI, to make a series of identical measurements of a synaptic protein interaction network in seven different animal models. We aim to identify molecular disruptions that are common to multiple models.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30237867 PMCID: PMC6139139 DOI: 10.1186/s13229-018-0229-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Autism Impact factor: 7.509
Animal models used in this study
| Strain | Source and background | First citation | Behavioral phenotype | Synaptic proteins | Electrophysiology |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shank3B−/− | Jax #017688 | [ | Abnormal social behavior; excessive grooming leading to self-injury. | Reduced PSD levels of GluR2, NR2A/2B, Homer. | In striatum: reduced mEPSP frequency and amplitude; reduced population spike amplitude. |
| Shank3Δex4–9+/− | Jax #017890 | [ | Less social sniffing, fewer vocalizations in males exposed to females. | Reduced GluR1 immunofluorescent puncta in hippocampus. | In hippocampus: reduced mEPSP amplitude but increased frequency. AMPAR-dependent deficit in population spike amplitude. Impaired LTP, normal LTD. |
| Ube3a2xTG | Jax #017482 | [ | Abnormal social behavior, fewer ultrasonic vocalizations in adult animals, increased repetitive grooming | Reduced ARC levels. | In whisker barrel cortex: reduced mEPSP frequency and amplitude; reduced evoked EPSC amplitude. |
| Cntnap2-/- | Jax #017482 | [ | Abnormal social behavior, fewer pup ultrasonic vocalizations, increased repetitive grooming | Somatosensory cortex: reduced population synchronization by Ca2+ imaging. | |
| TSC2+/− | Jax #004686 | [ | Abnormal social behavior [ | Hippocampus: increased mGluR5 [ | Hippocampus: enhanced LTP [ |
| FMR−/y | Jax #003025 | [ | Abnormal social behavior, increased repetitive behaviors, impaired memory; reviewed in [ | Less mGluR5 in forebrain PSD preps; normal levels of other GluRs; normal levels of all receptors in total membrane lysates. [ | Hippocampus: enhanced, abnormal LTD; LTP reported impaired or normal (reviewed by [ |
| VPA | Generated by M. Fahnestock, McMaster U. | [ | Reduced social interaction, increased repetitive/stereotyped behaviors [ | Cortex of 2-week-old rats: increased NR2A/B, [ | Cortical pyramidal neurons: enhanced NMDAR-mediated currents, enhanced LTP [ |
QMI targets, autism linkage, and antibody information
| Gene name | Protein name | Description | Simons score | Evidence in ASD | IP antibody | Probe antibody |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GRM5 | mGluR5 | Metabotropic glutamate receptor. G-protein coupled receptor activates Erk and PI3K cascades in response to glutamate. | NS | Rare variants identified in ASD patients [ | Millipore 5675 Cat#AB5675 | Neuromab N75/3 |
| GRIN1 | NMDAR1 | NMDA-type glutamate receptor subunits. NMDARs are heterotetramers with high Ca2+ permeability, essential for learning and memory. Subunits confer different functional properties to the receptor. | 3 | Rare variant in ASD siblings [ | Thermo 54.1 Cat# 02-0500 | Santa Cruz polyclonal C20 Cat# sc-1467 |
| GRIN2A | NMDAR2A | 4 | Genetic association [ | Neuromab N327/95 Cat#75-288 | Biolegend N327A/38 Cat# 832401 | |
| GRIN2B | NMDAR2B | 1 | Multiple rare variants identified in ASD patients. [ | Biolegend N59/20 Cat# 832501 | Biolegend N59/36 Cat# 818701 | |
| GRIA1 | GluR1 | AMPA-type glutamate receptor subunits. AMPARs are also tetramers. Subunits confer different functional properties to the receptor. | 2 | Recurrent missence mutations [ | Biolegend N355/1 Cat# 819801 | Millipore polyclonal 1504 Cat# AB1504 |
| GRIA2 | GluR2 | – | Contained in an ASD-linked deletion [ | Biolegend L21/32 Cat# 810501 | Santa Cruz polyclonal C20 Cat# sc-7610 | |
| NLGN3 | NL3 | Postsynaptic Neuroligin 3 binds presynaptic neurexins to create trans-synaptic adhesion bridges. Cleavage following activity may be involved in cell signaling. | 2 | Rare mutations; TADA study [ | Thermo 566209 Cat# MA5-24253 | Santa Cruz G2 Cat # sc-271880 |
| HOMER1 | Homer1 | Postsynaptic scaffold linking Shanks, mGluRs, and many other postsynaptic components. Forms homo-tetramer via N-terminal coiled-coil domain. | 4 | Rare variants [ | Lifespan Biosciences AT1F3 Cat# LS-C103482 | Santa Cruz D3 |
| Homer1A | Activity-dependent isoform of Homer1 that lacks coiled-coil domain and acts as a dominant negative, preventing scaffolding by long Homers. | – | Santa Cruz polyclonal M13 Cat# sc-8922 | |||
| DLG4 | PSD95 | Major component of postsynaptic density, scaffolds NMDARs and other components of the PSD via multiple binding domains. | NS | Rare variants and network gene analyses [ | Biolegend K28/74 Cat# 810301 | Biolegend K28/43 Cat# 810401 |
| DLG1 | SAP97 | Scaffold with similar function to PSD95, but differentspecific binding affinities. | NS | Exome sequencing revealed rare variants [ | Enzo RPI197.4 Cat# ADI-VAM-PS00 | SantaCruz polyclonal H60 Cat# sc-25661 |
| SHANK3 | SHANK3 | Scaffolding protein that forms a polymeric structure with Homer, and links multiple receptor types to downstream signaling pathways | 1S | Recurrent rare de novo mutations and copy number variations (deletions) [ | NeuroMab N367/62 Cat# 75-344 | Enzo Life Sciences RPI197.4 Cat# ADI-VAM-PS00 |
| UBE3A | Ube3A | E3 ubiquitin ligase, phospho-regulated by synaptic activity, that ubiquitinates Arc as well as other neuronal targets; also acts as a transcriptional regulator. | 3S | Rare variants and copy number variations (duplications) [ | Santa Cruz H182 Cat# sc-25509 | Santa Cruz E-4 Cat # sc-166689 |
| SYNGAP1 | SynGAP1 | A RAS GTPase that is heavily expressed at the PSD. Negatively regulates RAS. PSD95 binding may be important in regulating synaptic binding “slots.” | 1S | Multiple rare variants [ | Cell Signaling D20C7 Cat# 5539 | SantaCruz polyclonal R19 Cat# sc8572 |
| FYN | Fyn Kinase | Associates with PSD95 and NMDARs, phosphorylates the latter. Also binds and is activated by mGluRs. | – | None reported | Santa Cruz Fyn15 Cat# sc-434 | BioLegend FYN59 Cat# B149751 |
| PIK3R1 | PI3K | PI3K is a lipid kinase that phosphorylates membrane phospholipids and initiates PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling. The enzyme consists of a p85 regulatory and p110 catalytic subunit. Our antibodies target p85alpha. | – | PI3K subunits PIK3CG and PIK3R2 (Simons score 4 and S, respectively) have been linked to autism [ | Thermo-Fisher U5 Cat# MA1-74183 | Millipore AB6 Cat# 05-212 |
NS Listed in SFARI gene but not scored; − not listed
Fig. 1Workflow. a 3-mm sections of frontal cortex or bilateral hippocampi were collected from matched pairs of wildtype and mutant littermates. b P2 fractions were prepared to enrich for synaptic proteins. Shown here is typical enrichment of Homer1, PSD95, and NMDAR1 in P2 fractions, compared to equal amounts of total protein (by BCA assay) from brain homogenate (HO), P1 membrane pellet, and S2 soluble protein. c A panel of IP beads, each conjugated to a different antibody, is incubated with lysate, probed with fluorophore-conjugated antibodies, and read on a flow cytometer. d Known protein-protein interactions among the targeted protein network, in mouse, from the BioGRID database. Red lines indicate IP-western interactions, black lines IP-mass spectrometry. e, f Example histograms and corresponding node-edge visualizations. e Reduced IP: Shank3 Probe: Shank3 in a Shank3B−/− animal. Blue loop on Shank3 indicates a negative log2FC of an IP_Probe for the same target. f Increased Homer_PSD95 in VPA cortex lysate (red) and matched wildtype littermate control (black). Red line between nodes indicates positive log2FC of an interaction
Fig. 2Cortical QMI Diagrams for seven autism models. Edges indicate ANC-significant (p < 0.05) changes in the connected nodes; red = increased, blue = decreased in mutant/wildtype comparisons. Node thickness and color indicates the magnitude of the change. a Shank3B−/−, N = 4 pairs. b Shank3Δex4–9+/−, N = 4 pairs. c Ube3a2xTG, N = 4 pairs. d E12.5 VPA exposed animals, N = 4 pairs. e TSC2+/−, N = 4 pairs. f FMR1−/y, N = 4 pairs. g Cntnap2−/−, N = 4 pairs
Fig. 3Hippocampal QMI diagrams for four autism models. Edges indicate ANC-significant (p < 0.05) changes in the connected nodes; red = increased, blue = decreased in mutant/wildtype comparisons. Node thickness and color indicates the magnitude of the change. a Shank3B−/−, N = 6 pairs. b Shank3Δex4–9+/−, N = 4 pairs. c Ube3a2xTG, N = 4 pairs. d E12.5 VPA exposed animals, N = 4 pairs
Fig. 4Summary of ANC-significant interactions present ≥ 2 models. Columns are clustered by genotype/tissue type, while rows are clustered by each protein interaction/abundance measure. While this format is useful to give an overview of shared ANC hits, so few hits are shared by multiple models that clustering occurs based on only 1–2 common hits, making the clustering unreliable. Model identifiers in blue represent hippocampal tissue, red cortical tissue. Gray bars indicate the potential confounding factors of age and background strain (see Table 2)
Fig. 5Clustering models by log2FC matrices. a Principal component analysis of all genotypes/tissue types. Each group is plotted by its PC1 and PC2 values. Points are colored by HCPC clustering show in B. b HCPC clustering of ASD models. Based on the inertia gained by cutting at each level (inset graph), the HCPC program suggested clustering into four groups as shown. Numbers at the branch points show the approximately unbiased (AU) p value calculated by multiscale bootstrap resampling; clusters with AU greater than 95 are strongly supported by the data. Model identifiers in blue represent hippocampal tissue, red cortical tissue. Gray bars indicate the potential confounding factors of age and background strain (see Table 2)
Fig. 6AKT phosphorylation is reduced in Ube3a2xTG mice. a Representative western blots of synaptosomal fractions from adult mice probed with the indicated antibodies and b quantification. N (WT, Ube3a2xTG) = 5, 6 for all blots except 11, 12 for p-AKTs473 and panAKT. *p < 0.0001 by two-tailed t test