Altered Neocortical Gene Expression, Brain Overgrowth and Functional Over-Connectivity in Chd8 Haploinsufficient Mice

Philipp Suetterlin(King's College London), Shaun Hurley(King's College London), Conor Mohan(King's College London), Kimberley L. H. Riegman(King's College London), Marco Pagani(Center for Neuroscience and Cognitive Systems), Angela Caruso(Istituto Superiore di Sanità), Jacob Ellegood(University of Toronto), Alberto Galbusera(Center for Neuroscience and Cognitive Systems), Iván Crespo‐Enríquez(King's College London), Caterina Michetti(Italian Institute of Technology), Yohan Yee(SickKids Foundation), Robert Ellingford(King's College London), Olivier Brock(King's College London), Alessio Delogu(King's College London), Philippa H. Francis‐West(King's College London), Jason P. Lerch(University of Toronto), María Luisa Scattoni(Istituto Superiore di Sanità), Alessandro Gozzi(Center for Neuroscience and Cognitive Systems), Cathy Fernandes(King's College London), M. Albert Basson(King's College London)
Cerebral Cortex
February 27, 2018
Cited by 138Open Access
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Abstract

Truncating CHD8 mutations are amongst the highest confidence risk factors for autism spectrum disorder (ASD) identified to date. Here, we report that Chd8 heterozygous mice display increased brain size, motor delay, hypertelorism, pronounced hypoactivity, and anomalous responses to social stimuli. Whereas gene expression in the neocortex is only mildly affected at midgestation, over 600 genes are differentially expressed in the early postnatal neocortex. Genes involved in cell adhesion and axon guidance are particularly prominent amongst the downregulated transcripts. Resting-state functional MRI identified increased synchronized activity in cortico-hippocampal and auditory-parietal networks in Chd8 heterozygous mutant mice, implicating altered connectivity as a potential mechanism underlying the behavioral phenotypes. Together, these data suggest that altered brain growth and diminished expression of important neurodevelopmental genes that regulate long-range brain wiring are followed by distinctive anomalies in functional brain connectivity in Chd8+/- mice. Human imaging studies have reported altered functional connectivity in ASD patients, with long-range under-connectivity seemingly more frequent. Our data suggest that CHD8 haploinsufficiency represents a specific subtype of ASD where neuropsychiatric symptoms are underpinned by long-range over-connectivity.


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