自闭症相关基因shank3是斑马鱼社会传染的必要条件。

IF 6.3 1区 医学 Q1 GENETICS & HEREDITY
Kyriacos Kareklas, Magda C Teles, Elena Dreosti, Rui F Oliveira
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:通过动物模型可以针对自闭症相关基因(如 shank3 基因)评估其对行为表型的影响。然而,这通常仅限于与社会互动相关的简单行为。社会传染是一种复杂的表型,是人类移情行为的基础,包括关注他人的行为以识别和分享其情绪或情感状态。方法:在此,我们描述了一种斑马鱼模型的开发过程,该模型确定了shank3突变导致社交传染缺陷的神经认知机制。我们使用CRISPR-Cas9技术对shank3a基因进行突变,发现斑马鱼的shank3a旁系基因与人类基因相比具有更高的同源性和功能保护性。首先将突变体与野生型进行两阶段比较,包括观察两种冲突状态--痛苦和中性,以及随后在不再出现这种差异时回忆和辨别其他状态。然后,比较基因型之间不同神经可塑性标记物的全脑表达,并评估它们对集群特异性表型变异的贡献:结果:shank3 基因突变会导致注意力缺陷,造成识别情感状态的困难,从而明显降低社会传染性。此外,突变还改变了神经元可塑性基因的表达。然而,只有下调的神经胶质蛋白与shank3a的表达聚集在一起,共同构成了突触发生的组成部分,这特别导致了注意力的变化:局限性:虽然斑马鱼在确定shank3突变对复合社会行为的作用方面非常有用,但它们不太可能代表人类ASD病理所表现出的社会认知和沟通缺陷的全部复杂性。此外,斑马鱼也不能代表这些缺陷在人类身上表现出的高阶移情和亲社会表型:我们证明了自闭症相关基因的斑马鱼直向同源物与情感识别的注意控制及由此产生的社会传染之间的因果联系。这在斑马鱼中建立了自闭症情感交流病理模型,并揭示了遗传注意力缺陷机制,从而解决了目前关于自闭症个体情感识别困难机制的争论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Autism-associated gene shank3 is necessary for social contagion in zebrafish.

Autism-associated gene shank3 is necessary for social contagion in zebrafish.

Autism-associated gene shank3 is necessary for social contagion in zebrafish.

Autism-associated gene shank3 is necessary for social contagion in zebrafish.

Background: Animal models enable targeting autism-associated genes, such as the shank3 gene, to assess their impact on behavioural phenotypes. However, this is often limited to simple behaviours relevant for social interaction. Social contagion is a complex phenotype forming the basis of human empathic behaviour and involves attention to the behaviour of others for recognizing and sharing their emotional or affective state. Thus, it is a form of social communication, which constitutes the most common developmental impairment across autism spectrum disorders (ASD).

Methods: Here we describe the development of a zebrafish model that identifies the neurocognitive mechanisms by which shank3 mutation drives deficits in social contagion. We used a CRISPR-Cas9 technique to generate mutations to the shank3a gene, a zebrafish paralogue found to present greater orthology and functional conservation relative to the human gene. Mutants were first compared to wild types during a two-phase protocol that involves the observation of two conflicting states, distress and neutral, and the later recall and discrimination of others when no longer presenting such differences. Then, the whole-brain expression of different neuroplasticity markers was compared between genotypes and their contribution to cluster-specific phenotypic variation was assessed.

Results: The shank3 mutation markedly reduced social contagion via deficits in attention contributing to difficulties in recognising affective states. Also, the mutation changed the expression of neuronal plasticity genes. However, only downregulated neuroligins clustered with shank3a expression under a combined synaptogenesis component that contributed specifically to variation in attention.

Limitations: While zebrafish are extremely useful in identifying the role of shank3 mutations to composite social behaviour, they are unlikely to represent the full complexity of socio-cognitive and communication deficits presented by human ASD pathology. Moreover, zebrafish cannot represent the scaling up of these deficits to higher-order empathic and prosocial phenotypes seen in humans.

Conclusions: We demonstrate a causal link between the zebrafish orthologue of an ASD-associated gene and the attentional control of affect recognition and consequent social contagion. This models autistic affect-communication pathology in zebrafish and reveals a genetic attention-deficit mechanism, addressing the ongoing debate for such mechanisms accounting for emotion recognition difficulties in autistic individuals.

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来源期刊
Molecular Autism
Molecular Autism GENETICS & HEREDITY-NEUROSCIENCES
CiteScore
12.10
自引率
1.60%
发文量
44
审稿时长
17 weeks
期刊介绍: Molecular Autism is a peer-reviewed, open access journal that publishes high-quality basic, translational and clinical research that has relevance to the etiology, pathobiology, or treatment of autism and related neurodevelopmental conditions. Research that includes integration across levels is encouraged. Molecular Autism publishes empirical studies, reviews, and brief communications.
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