4.7 Article

Foxp2 controls synaptic wiring of corticostriatal circuits and vocal communication by opposing Mef2c

Journal

NATURE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 19, Issue 11, Pages 1513-1522

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nn.4380

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Funding

  1. NIH/NICHD [R37 HD028341]
  2. Nancy Lurie Marks Family Foundation
  3. Simons Center for the Social Brain at MIT
  4. Paul G. Allen Family Foundation
  5. National Science Council [NSC97-2321-B-010-006, NSC98-2321-B-010-002, NSC99-2321-B-010-002, NSC100-2321-B-010-002, NSC101-2321-B-010-021, NSC102-2321-B-010-018, NSC102-2911-I-010-506]
  6. Ministry of Science and Technology [MOST103-2321-B-010-009, MOST104-2321-B-010-022]
  7. National Health Research Institutes [NHRI-EX104-10429NI, NHRI-EX105-10429NI]
  8. Aiming for Top University grant from the Ministry of Education, Taiwan

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Cortico-basal ganglia circuits are critical for speech and language and are implicated in autism spectrum disorder, in which language function can be severely affected. We demonstrate that in the mouse striatum, the gene Foxp2 negatively interacts with the synapse suppressor gene Mef2c. We present causal evidence that Mef2c inhibition by Foxp2 in neonatal mouse striatum controls synaptogenesis of corticostriatal inputs and vocalization in neonates. Mef2c suppresses corticostriatal synapse formation and striatal spinogenesis, but can itself be repressed by Foxp2 through direct DNA binding. Foxp2 deletion de-represses Mef2c, and both intrastriatal and global decrease of Mef2c rescue vocalization and striatal spinogenesis defects of Foxp2-deletion mutants. These findings suggest that Foxp2-Mef2C signaling is critical to corticostriatal circuit formation. If found in humans, such signaling defects could contribute to a range of neurologic and neuropsychiatric disorders.

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