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Cortical neuronal hyperexcitability and synaptic changes in SGCE mutation-positive myoclonus dystonia

Myoclonus dystonia is a childhood-onset hyperkinetic movement disorder with a combined motor and psychiatric phenotype. It represents one of the few autosomal dominant inherited dystonic disorders and is caused by mutations in the ε-sarcoglycan (SGCE) gene. Work to date suggests that dystonia is cau...

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Autores principales: Sperandeo, Alessandra, Tamburini, Claudia, Noakes, Zoe, de la Fuente, Daniel Cabezas, Keefe, Francesca, Petter, Olena, Plumbly, William, Clifton, Nicholas E, Li, Meng, Peall, Kathryn J
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10115238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36204995
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awac365
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author Sperandeo, Alessandra
Tamburini, Claudia
Noakes, Zoe
de la Fuente, Daniel Cabezas
Keefe, Francesca
Petter, Olena
Plumbly, William
Clifton, Nicholas E
Li, Meng
Peall, Kathryn J
author_facet Sperandeo, Alessandra
Tamburini, Claudia
Noakes, Zoe
de la Fuente, Daniel Cabezas
Keefe, Francesca
Petter, Olena
Plumbly, William
Clifton, Nicholas E
Li, Meng
Peall, Kathryn J
author_sort Sperandeo, Alessandra
collection PubMed
description Myoclonus dystonia is a childhood-onset hyperkinetic movement disorder with a combined motor and psychiatric phenotype. It represents one of the few autosomal dominant inherited dystonic disorders and is caused by mutations in the ε-sarcoglycan (SGCE) gene. Work to date suggests that dystonia is caused by disruption of neuronal networks, principally basal ganglia-cerebello-thalamo-cortical circuits. Investigation of cortical involvement has primarily focused on disruption to interneuron inhibitory activity, rather than the excitatory activity of cortical pyramidal neurons. Here, we have sought to examine excitatory cortical glutamatergic activity using two approaches: the CRISPR/Cas9 editing of a human embryonic cell line, generating an SGCE compound heterozygous mutation, and three patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cell lines, each gene edited to generate matched wild-type SGCE control lines. Differentiation towards a cortical neuronal phenotype demonstrated no significant differences in either early- (PAX6, FOXG1) or late-stage (CTIP2, TBR1) neurodevelopmental markers. However, functional characterization using Ca(2+) imaging and microelectrode array approaches identified an increase in network activity, while single-cell patch clamp studies found a greater propensity towards action potential generation with larger amplitudes and shorter half-widths associated with SGCE mutations. Bulk RNA sequencing analysis identified gene ontological enrichment for ‘neuron projection development’, ‘synaptic signalling’ and ‘synaptic transmission’. Examination of dendritic morphology found SGCE mutations to be associated with a significantly higher number of branches and longer branch lengths, together with longer ion-channel dense axon initial segments, particularly towards the latter stages of differentiation (Days 80 and 100). Gene expression and protein quantification of key synaptic proteins (synaptophysin, synapsin and PSD95), AMPA and NMDA receptor subunits found no significant differences between the SGCE mutation and matched wild-type lines. By contrast, significant changes to synaptic adhesion molecule expression were identified, namely higher presynaptic neurexin-1 and lower postsynaptic neuroligin-4 levels in the SGCE mutation carrying lines. Our study demonstrates an increased intrinsic excitability of cortical glutamatergic neuronal cells in the context of SGCE mutations, coupled with a more complex neurite morphology and disruption to synaptic adhesion molecules. These changes potentially represent key components to the development of the hyperkinetic clinical phenotype observed in myoclonus dystonia, as well a central feature to the wider spectrum of dystonic disorders, potentially providing targets for future therapeutic development.
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spelling pubmed-101152382023-04-20 Cortical neuronal hyperexcitability and synaptic changes in SGCE mutation-positive myoclonus dystonia Sperandeo, Alessandra Tamburini, Claudia Noakes, Zoe de la Fuente, Daniel Cabezas Keefe, Francesca Petter, Olena Plumbly, William Clifton, Nicholas E Li, Meng Peall, Kathryn J Brain Original Article Myoclonus dystonia is a childhood-onset hyperkinetic movement disorder with a combined motor and psychiatric phenotype. It represents one of the few autosomal dominant inherited dystonic disorders and is caused by mutations in the ε-sarcoglycan (SGCE) gene. Work to date suggests that dystonia is caused by disruption of neuronal networks, principally basal ganglia-cerebello-thalamo-cortical circuits. Investigation of cortical involvement has primarily focused on disruption to interneuron inhibitory activity, rather than the excitatory activity of cortical pyramidal neurons. Here, we have sought to examine excitatory cortical glutamatergic activity using two approaches: the CRISPR/Cas9 editing of a human embryonic cell line, generating an SGCE compound heterozygous mutation, and three patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cell lines, each gene edited to generate matched wild-type SGCE control lines. Differentiation towards a cortical neuronal phenotype demonstrated no significant differences in either early- (PAX6, FOXG1) or late-stage (CTIP2, TBR1) neurodevelopmental markers. However, functional characterization using Ca(2+) imaging and microelectrode array approaches identified an increase in network activity, while single-cell patch clamp studies found a greater propensity towards action potential generation with larger amplitudes and shorter half-widths associated with SGCE mutations. Bulk RNA sequencing analysis identified gene ontological enrichment for ‘neuron projection development’, ‘synaptic signalling’ and ‘synaptic transmission’. Examination of dendritic morphology found SGCE mutations to be associated with a significantly higher number of branches and longer branch lengths, together with longer ion-channel dense axon initial segments, particularly towards the latter stages of differentiation (Days 80 and 100). Gene expression and protein quantification of key synaptic proteins (synaptophysin, synapsin and PSD95), AMPA and NMDA receptor subunits found no significant differences between the SGCE mutation and matched wild-type lines. By contrast, significant changes to synaptic adhesion molecule expression were identified, namely higher presynaptic neurexin-1 and lower postsynaptic neuroligin-4 levels in the SGCE mutation carrying lines. Our study demonstrates an increased intrinsic excitability of cortical glutamatergic neuronal cells in the context of SGCE mutations, coupled with a more complex neurite morphology and disruption to synaptic adhesion molecules. These changes potentially represent key components to the development of the hyperkinetic clinical phenotype observed in myoclonus dystonia, as well a central feature to the wider spectrum of dystonic disorders, potentially providing targets for future therapeutic development. Oxford University Press 2022-10-07 /pmc/articles/PMC10115238/ /pubmed/36204995 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awac365 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Sperandeo, Alessandra
Tamburini, Claudia
Noakes, Zoe
de la Fuente, Daniel Cabezas
Keefe, Francesca
Petter, Olena
Plumbly, William
Clifton, Nicholas E
Li, Meng
Peall, Kathryn J
Cortical neuronal hyperexcitability and synaptic changes in SGCE mutation-positive myoclonus dystonia
title Cortical neuronal hyperexcitability and synaptic changes in SGCE mutation-positive myoclonus dystonia
title_full Cortical neuronal hyperexcitability and synaptic changes in SGCE mutation-positive myoclonus dystonia
title_fullStr Cortical neuronal hyperexcitability and synaptic changes in SGCE mutation-positive myoclonus dystonia
title_full_unstemmed Cortical neuronal hyperexcitability and synaptic changes in SGCE mutation-positive myoclonus dystonia
title_short Cortical neuronal hyperexcitability and synaptic changes in SGCE mutation-positive myoclonus dystonia
title_sort cortical neuronal hyperexcitability and synaptic changes in sgce mutation-positive myoclonus dystonia
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10115238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36204995
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awac365
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