Abstract

Background

The brain cortex is responsible for many higher-level cognitive functions. Disruptions during cortical development have long-lasting consequences on brain function and are associated with the etiology of brain disorders. We previously found that the protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor delta Ptprd, which is genetically associated with several human neurodevelopmental disorders, is essential to cortical brain development. Loss of Ptprd expression induced an aberrant increase of excitatory neurons in embryonic and neonatal mice by hyper-activating the pro-neurogenic receptors TrkB and PDGFRβ in neural precursor cells. However, whether these alterations have long-lasting consequences in adulthood remains unknown.

Results

Here, we found that in Ptprd+/- or Ptprd-/- mice, the developmental increase of excitatory neurons persists through adulthood, affecting excitatory synaptic function in the medial prefrontal cortex. Likewise, heterozygosity or homozygosity for Ptprd also induced an increase of inhibitory cortical GABAergic neurons and impaired inhibitory synaptic transmission. Lastly, Ptprd+/- or Ptprd-/- mice displayed autistic-like behaviors and no learning and memory impairments or anxiety.

Conclusions

These results indicate that loss of Ptprd has long-lasting effects on cortical neuron number and synaptic function that may aberrantly impact ASD-like behaviors.

Details

Title
Loss of protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor delta PTPRD increases the number of cortical neurons, impairs synaptic function and induces autistic-like behaviors in adult mice
Author
Cortés, Bastián I; Meza, Rodrigo C; Ancatén-González, Carlos; Ardiles, Nicolás M; María-Ignacia Aránguiz; Tomita, Hideaki; Kaplan, David R; Cornejo, Francisca; Nunez-Parra, Alexia; Moya, Pablo R; Chávez, Andrés E; Cancino, Gonzalo I
Pages
1-15
Section
Research article
Publication year
2024
Publication date
2024
Publisher
BioMed Central
ISSN
07169760
e-ISSN
07176287
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
3079207568
Copyright
© 2024. This work is licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.