| Literature DB >> 31257103 |
Samuele G Marro1, Soham Chanda2, Nan Yang1, Justyna A Janas1, Giulio Valperga1, Justin Trotter3, Bo Zhou2, Sean Merrill3, Issa Yousif1, Hannah Shelby1, Hannes Vogel4, M Yashar S Kalani5, Thomas C Südhof6, Marius Wernig7.
Abstract
The autism-associated synaptic-adhesion gene Neuroligin-4 (NLGN4) is poorly conserved evolutionarily, limiting conclusions from Nlgn4 mouse models for human cells. Here, we show that the cellular and subcellular expression of human and murine Neuroligin-4 differ, with human Neuroligin-4 primarily expressed in cerebral cortex and localized to excitatory synapses. Overexpression of NLGN4 in human embryonic stem cell-derived neurons resulted in an increase in excitatory synapse numbers but a remarkable decrease in synaptic strength. Human neurons carrying the syndromic autism mutation NLGN4-R704C also formed more excitatory synapses but with increased functional synaptic transmission due to a postsynaptic mechanism, while genetic loss of NLGN4 did not significantly affect synapses in the human neurons analyzed. Thus, the NLGN4-R704C mutation represents a change-of-function mutation. Our work reveals contrasting roles of NLGN4 in human and mouse neurons, suggesting that human evolution has impacted even fundamental cell biological processes generally assumed to be highly conserved.Entities:
Keywords: ASD; Neuroligin-4; autism; embryonic stem cells; induced neuronal (iN) cells; isogenic cell lines; synaptic transmission
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31257103 PMCID: PMC6706319 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2019.05.043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuron ISSN: 0896-6273 Impact factor: 17.173