International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Oct 2023)

Transcriptional Dysregulation and Impaired Neuronal Activity in <i>FMR1</i> Knock-Out and Fragile X Patients’ iPSC-Derived Models

  • Gilles Maussion,
  • Cecilia Rocha,
  • Narges Abdian,
  • Dimitri Yang,
  • Julien Turk,
  • Dulce Carrillo Valenzuela,
  • Luisa Pimentel,
  • Zhipeng You,
  • Barbara Morquette,
  • Michael Nicouleau,
  • Eric Deneault,
  • Samuel Higgins,
  • Carol X.-Q. Chen,
  • Wolfgang E. Reintsch,
  • Stanley Ho,
  • Vincent Soubannier,
  • Sarah Lépine,
  • Zora Modrusan,
  • Jessica Lund,
  • William Stephenson,
  • Rajib Schubert,
  • Thomas M. Durcan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms241914926
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 19
p. 14926

Abstract

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Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is caused by a repression of the FMR1 gene that codes the Fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP), an RNA binding protein involved in processes that are crucial for proper brain development. To better understand the consequences of the absence of FMRP, we analyzed gene expression profiles and activities of cortical neural progenitor cells (NPCs) and neurons obtained from FXS patients’ induced pluripotent stem cells (IPSCs) and IPSC-derived cells from FMR1 knock-out engineered using CRISPR-CAS9 technology. Multielectrode array recordings revealed in FMR1 KO and FXS patient cells, decreased mean firing rates; activities blocked by tetrodotoxin application. Increased expression of presynaptic mRNA and transcription factors involved in the forebrain specification and decreased levels of mRNA coding AMPA and NMDA subunits were observed using RNA sequencing on FMR1 KO neurons and validated using quantitative PCR in both models. Intriguingly, 40% of the differentially expressed genes were commonly deregulated between NPCs and differentiating neurons with significant enrichments in FMRP targets and autism-related genes found amongst downregulated genes. Our findings suggest that the absence of FMRP affects transcriptional profiles since the NPC stage, and leads to impaired activity and neuronal differentiation over time, which illustrates the critical role of FMRP protein in neuronal development.

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