International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jan 2023)

Global Impairment of Immediate-Early Genes Expression in Rett Syndrome Models and Patients Linked to Myelination Defects

  • Paolo Petazzi,
  • Olga Caridad Jorge-Torres,
  • Antonio Gomez,
  • Iolanda Scognamiglio,
  • Jordi Serra-Musach,
  • Angelika Merkel,
  • Daniela Grases,
  • Clara Xiol,
  • Mar O’Callaghan,
  • Judith Armstrong,
  • Manel Esteller,
  • Sonia Guil

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24021453
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 2
p. 1453

Abstract

Read online

Rett syndrome (RTT) is a severe neurodevelopmental disease caused almost exclusively by mutations to the MeCP2 gene. This disease may be regarded as a synaptopathy, with impairments affecting synaptic plasticity, inhibitory and excitatory transmission and network excitability. The complete understanding of the mechanisms behind how the transcription factor MeCP2 so profoundly affects the mammalian brain are yet to be determined. What is known, is that MeCP2 involvement in activity-dependent expression programs is a critical link between this protein and proper neuronal activity, which allows the correct maturation of connections in the brain. By using RNA-sequencing analysis, we found several immediate-early genes (IEGs, key mediators of activity-dependent responses) directly bound by MeCP2 at the chromatin level and upregulated in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex of the Mecp2-KO mouse. Quantification of the IEGs response to stimulus both in vivo and in vitro detected an aberrant expression pattern in MeCP2-deficient neurons. Furthermore, altered IEGs levels were found in RTT patient’s peripheral blood and brain regions of post-mortem samples, correlating with impaired expression of downstream myelination-related genes. Altogether, these data indicate that proper IEGs expression is crucial for correct synaptic development and that MeCP2 has a key role in the regulation of IEGs.

Keywords