4.8 Article

Mutations in trpγ, the homologue of TRPC6 autism candidate gene, causes autism-like behavioral deficits in Drosophila

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MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
卷 27, 期 8, 页码 3328-3342

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SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41380-022-01555-1

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资金

  1. FONDECYT Postdoctoral grant [3160177]
  2. FONDECYT Iniciacion grant [11190601, 11180531]
  3. FONDECYT [1180403]
  4. Centro Interdisciplinario de Neurociencia de Valparaiso (CINV) Millennium Institute grant - Millennium Scientific Initiative of the Ministerio de Economia, Fomento y Turismo [P09-022-F]
  5. Programa de Atraccion e Insercion de Capital Humano (PAI) [79170081]
  6. FAPESP [FAPESP/CEPID 2013/08028-1]
  7. CNPq [303712/2016-3]
  8. Genome Canada
  9. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  10. Government of Ontario
  11. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  12. Hospital for Sick Children Foundation
  13. Ontario Brain Institute (OBI)
  14. Autism Speaks
  15. University of Toronto McLaughlin Centre

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This study provides further evidence that the TRPC6 gene is a risk factor for Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Using fruit flies as a model, the researchers found that null mutations in the TRPC6 gene cause behavioral defects similar to those seen in ASD patients. Interestingly, the TRPC6 agonist hyperforin was able to attenuate many of these defects.
Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is characterized by impaired social communication, restricted interests, and repetitive and stereotyped behaviors. The TRPC6 (transient receptor potential channel 6) represents an ASD candidate gene under an oligogenic/multifactorial model based on the initial description and cellular characterization of an individual with ASD bearing a de novo heterozygous mutation disrupting TRPC6, together with the enrichment of disruptive TRPC6 variants in ASD cases as compared to controls. Here, we perform a clinical re-evaluation of the initial non-verbal patient, and also present eight newly reported individuals ascertained for ASD and bearing predicted loss-of-function mutations in TRPC6. In order to understand the consequences of mutations in TRPC6 on nervous system function, we used the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, to show that null mutations in transient receptor gamma (trp gamma; the fly gene most similar to TRPC6), cause a number of behavioral defects that mirror features seen in ASD patients, including deficits in social interactions (based on courtship behavior), impaired sleep homeostasis (without affecting the circadian control of sleep), hyperactivity in both young and old flies, and defects in learning and memory. Some defects, most notably in sleep, differed in severity between males and females and became normal with age. Interestingly, hyperforin, a TRPC6 agonist and the primary active component of the St. John's wort antidepressant, attenuated many of the deficits expressed by trp gamma mutant flies. In summary, our results provide further evidence that the TRPC6 gene is a risk factor for ASD. In addition, they show that the behavioral defects caused by mutations in TRPC6 can be modeled in Drosophila, thereby establishing a paradigm to examine the impact of mutations in other candidate genes.

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