Translational Psychiatry (Sep 2022)

From bench to bedside: The mGluR5 system in people with and without Autism Spectrum Disorder and animal model systems

  • Cornelia Carey,
  • Nisha Singh,
  • Joel T. Dunn,
  • Teresa Sementa,
  • Maria Andreina Mendez,
  • Hester Velthuis,
  • Andreia C. Pereira,
  • Charlotte Marie Pretzsch,
  • Jamie Horder,
  • Stefan Hader,
  • David J. Lythgoe,
  • Diana-Georgina Rotaru,
  • Anthony Gee,
  • Diana Cash,
  • Mattia Veronese,
  • Declan Murphy,
  • Grainne McAlonan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-022-02143-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract The metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGluR5) is a key regulator of excitatory (E) glutamate and inhibitory (I) γ-amino butyric acid (GABA) signalling in the brain. Despite the close functional ties between mGluR5 and E/I signalling, no-one has directly examined the relationship between mGluR5 and glutamate or GABA in vivo in the human brain of autistic individuals. We measured [18F] FPEB (18F-3-fluoro-5-[(pyridin-3-yl)ethynyl]benzonitrile) binding in 15 adults (6 with Autism Spectrum Disorder) using two regions of interest, the left dorsomedial prefrontal cortex and a region primarily composed of left striatum and thalamus. These two regions were mapped out using MEGA-PRESS voxels and then superimposed on reconstructed PET images. This allowed for direct comparison between mGluR5, GABA + and Glx. To better understand the molecular underpinnings of our results we used an autoradiography study of mGluR5 in three mouse models associated with ASD: Cntnap2 knockout, Shank3 knockout, and 16p11.2 deletion. Autistic individuals had significantly higher [18F] FPEB binding (t (13) = −2.86, p = 0.047) in the left striatum/thalamus region of interest as compared to controls. Within this region, there was a strong negative correlation between GABA + and mGluR5 density across the entire cohort (Pearson’s correlation: r (14) = −0.763, p = 0.002). Cntnap2 KO mice had significantly higher mGlu5 receptor binding in the striatum (caudate-putamen) as compared to wild-type (WT) mice (n = 15, p = 0.03). There were no differences in mGluR5 binding for mice with the Shank3 knockout or 16p11.2 deletion. Given that Cntnap2 is associated with a specific striatal deficit of parvalbumin positive GABA interneurons and ‘autistic’ features, our findings suggest that an increase in mGluR5 in ASD may relate to GABAergic interneuron abnormalities.