PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Neurodevelopmental disorder-associated ZBTB20 gene variants affect dendritic and synaptic structure.

  • Kelly A Jones,
  • Yue Luo,
  • Lynn Dukes-Rimsky,
  • Deepak P Srivastava,
  • Richa Koul-Tewari,
  • Theron A Russell,
  • Lauren P Shapiro,
  • Anand K Srivastava,
  • Peter Penzes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0203760
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
p. e0203760

Abstract

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Dendritic spine morphology and dendritic arborization are key determinants of neuronal connectivity and play critical roles in learning, memory and behavior function. Recently, defects of ZBTB20, a BTB and zinc finger domain containing transcriptional repressor, have been implicated in a wide range of neurodevelopmental disorders, including intellectual disability and autism. Here we show distinct effects of expression of two major isoforms, long and short, of ZBTB20, and its neurodevelopmental disorder-linked variants, on dendritic architecture of cultured rat cortical pyramidal neurons. The N-terminal of ZBTB20 showed a role in regulating dendritic spine morphology. Two ZBTB20 single nucleotide variants, located at the N-terminal and central regions of the protein and potentially conferring autism risk, altered dendritic spine morphology. In contrast, a single nucleotide variant identified in patients with intellectual disability and located at the C-terminus of ZBTB20 affected dendritic arborization and dendritic length but had no effect on dendritic spine morphology. Furthermore, truncation of the extreme C-terminus of ZBTB20 caused spine and dendritic morphological changes that were similar but distinct from those caused by the C-terminal variant. Taken together, our study suggests ZBTB20's role in dendritic and synaptic structure and provide possible mechanisms of its effect in neurodevelopmental disorders.