Huei Bin Wang, Natalie E Smale, Sarah H Brown, Sophia Anne Marie B Villanueva, David Zhou, Aly Mulji, Deap S Bhandal, Kyle Nguyen-Ngo, John R Harvey, Cristina A Ghiani, Christopher S Colwell
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引用次数: 0
摘要
脆性 X 综合征(FXS)是由脆性 X 弱智 1(FMR1)基因中 CGG 重复序列异常扩增引起的一种神经发育障碍。许多 FXS 患者都有睡眠障碍,我们试图利用 Fmr1 基因敲除(KO)小鼠模型来探索这些症状以及定时喂养干预可能带来的益处。这些突变体显示出明显的睡眠和昼夜节律紊乱症状,包括睡眠开始时间延迟、活动节律支离破碎以及周期间变异性增加。Fmr1 KO小鼠对光的昼夜节律行为反应表现出缺陷,其遮蔽能力减弱,对LD周期变化的复位时间延长,与骨架光周期的同步性发生改变,光诱导的活动节律相移幅度降低。用神经示踪剂霍乱毒素(β亚基)调查视网膜对侧上皮细胞核(SCN)的输入,并定量分析光诱导的cFos在SCN中的表达,发现Fmr1 KO的视网膜对SCN的神经支配异常,这为观察到的行为缺陷提供了可能的机理解释。有趣的是,社交和重复行为的中断与睡眠持续时间和片段化相关。在了解了行为缺陷的本质后,我们决定采用定时喂食法(6小时/18小时喂食/快餐周期),作为一种基于昼夜节律的策略,使昼夜节律不受光照的影响。这种干预措施明显改善了突变体的活动节律和睡眠。引人注目的是,定时进食改善了Fmr1 KO突变体的社会互动,减少了重复行为,并降低了γ干扰素和白细胞介素-12的水平,这表明定时进食可能是减少炎症的有效方法。总之,这项研究为开发基于昼夜节律的干预措施以帮助改善神经发育障碍症状的努力提供了支持。
Scheduled feeding improves behavioral outcomes and reduces inflammation in a mouse model of Fragile X syndrome.
Fragile X syndrome (FXS), a leading inherited cause of intellectual disability and autism, is frequently accompanied by sleep and circadian rhythm disturbances. In this study, we comprehensively characterized these disruptions and evaluated the therapeutic potential of a circadian-based intervention in the fragile X mental retardation 1 (FMR1) knockout (KO) mouse. The Fmr1 KO mice exhibited fragmented sleep, impaired locomotor rhythmicity, and attenuated behavioral responses to light, linked to an abnormal retinal innervation and reduction of light-evoked neuronal activation in the suprachiasmatic nucleus. Behavioral testing revealed significant deficits in social memory and increased repetitive behaviors in the mutants, which correlated with sleep fragmentation. Remarkably, a scheduled feeding paradigm (6-hour feeding/18-hour fasting) significantly enhanced circadian rhythmicity, consolidated sleep, and improved social deficits and repetitive behaviors in the Fmr1 KO mice. This intervention also normalized the elevated levels of some pro-inflammatory cytokines, including IL-12 and IFN-γ, in the mutants' blood, suggesting that its benefits extend to inflammatory pathways. These findings highlight the interplay between circadian disruption, behavior, and an inflammatory response in FXS, and provide compelling evidence that time-restricted feeding may serve as a promising non-pharmacological approach for improving core symptoms in neurodevelopmental disorders.