Cell Reports (Feb 2016)

Inborn Errors of Long-Chain Fatty Acid β-Oxidation Link Neural Stem Cell Self-Renewal to Autism

  • Zhigang Xie,
  • Albert Jones,
  • Jude T. Deeney,
  • Seong Kwon Hur,
  • Vytas A. Bankaitis

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 5
pp. 991 – 999

Abstract

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Summary: Inborn errors of metabolism (IEMs) occur with high incidence in human populations. Especially prevalent among these are inborn deficiencies in fatty acid β-oxidation (FAO), which are clinically associated with developmental neuropsychiatric disorders, including autism. We now report that neural stem cell (NSC)-autonomous insufficiencies in the activity of TMLHE (an autism risk factor that supports long-chain FAO by catalyzing carnitine biosynthesis), of CPT1A (an enzyme required for long-chain FAO transport into mitochondria), or of fatty acid mobilization from lipid droplets reduced NSC pools in the mouse embryonic neocortex. Lineage tracing experiments demonstrated that reduced flux through the FAO pathway potentiated NSC symmetric differentiating divisions at the expense of self-renewing stem cell division modes. The collective data reveal a key role for FAO in controlling NSC-to-IPC transition in the mammalian embryonic brain and suggest NSC self renewal as a cellular mechanism underlying the association between IEMs and autism. : The mechanisms underlying the association between inborn errors of fatty acid metabolism and developmental brain disorders such as autism remain unclear. Xie et al. find that TMLHE, a carnitine biosynthesis enzyme, and carnitine-dependent long-chain fatty acid β-oxidation control the neural stem cell pool during neocortical development by maintaining self-renewing divisions.