Abstract
Mutations in the gene MECP2 cause an intellectual-disability disorder called Rett syndrome. In a mouse model, electrical stimulation of deep brain regions is found to ameliorate some of the features of the syndrome. See Letter p.430 Rett syndrome is a genetic disorder that causes profound intellectual disability and other impairments. Huda Zoghbi and colleagues now show that in a mouse model of the disorder, a two-week course of daily deep-brain stimulation of the fimbria-fornix — part of the brain that provides input to the hippocampus — restored hippocampal-dependent memory when tested three weeks after the end of the treatment. It also restored hippocampal long-term potentiation and neurogenesis. These findings indicate that deep-brain stimulation, which is already used in the treatment of motor diseases such as Parkinson's disease and dystonia, could be a viable approach to mitigating cognitive impairment in Rett syndrome and other disorders of childhood intellectual disability.
Published Version
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