4.7 Article

Treatment with the Bacterial Toxin CNF1 Selectively Rescues Cognitive and Brain Mitochondrial Deficits in a Female Mouse Model of Rett Syndrome Carrying a MeCP2-Null Mutation

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22136739

Keywords

Rett syndrome; mouse models; cognition; energy metabolism; mTOR; mitochondria; Rho GTPases; behaviour

Funding

  1. International Rett syndrome Foundation, USA [3107]
  2. Italian Ministry of Health, Italy [GR-2018-12366210]
  3. Jerome Lejeune Foundation, France

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Rett syndrome is a rare neurological disorder caused by mutations in the X-linked MECP2 gene and currently has no cure. Research has shown that CNF1 can partially restore cognitive defects in a Rett syndrome mouse model, but its efficacy varies depending on the specific MECP2 mutation carried by the mice.
Rett syndrome (RTT) is a rare neurological disorder caused by mutations in the X-linked MECP2 gene and a major cause of intellectual disability in females. No cure exists for RTT. We previously reported that the behavioural phenotype and brain mitochondria dysfunction are widely rescued by a single intracerebroventricular injection of the bacterial toxin CNF1 in a RTT mouse model carrying a truncating mutation of the MeCP2 gene (MeCP2-308 mice). Given the heterogeneity of MECP2 mutations in RTT patients, we tested the CNF1 therapeutic efficacy in a mouse model carrying a null mutation (MeCP2-Bird mice). CNF1 selectively rescued cognitive defects, without improving other RTT-related behavioural alterations, and restored brain mitochondrial respiratory chain complex activity in MeCP2-Bird mice. To shed light on the molecular mechanisms underlying the differential CNF1 effects on the behavioural phenotype, we compared treatment effects on relevant signalling cascades in the brain of the two RTT models. CNF1 provided a significant boost of the mTOR activation in MeCP2-308 hippocampus, which was not observed in the MeCP2-Bird model, possibly explaining the differential effects of CNF1. These results demonstrate that CNF1 efficacy depends on the mutation beared by MeCP2-mutated mice, stressing the need of testing potential therapeutic approaches across RTT models.

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