Abstract

FXS is the most common genetic cause of intellectual (ID) and autism spectrum disorders (ASD). FXS is caused by loss of FMRP, an RNA-binding protein involved in the translational regulation of a large number of neuronal mRNAs. Absence of FMRP has been shown to lead to elevated protein synthesis and is thought to be a major cause of the synaptic plasticity and behavioural deficits in FXS. The increase in protein synthesis results in part from abnormal activation of key protein translation pathways downstream of ERK1/2 and mTOR signalling. Pharmacological and genetic interventions that attenuate hyperactivation of these pathways can normalize levels of protein synthesis and improve phenotypic outcomes in animal models of FXS. Several efforts are currently underway to trial this strategy in patients with FXS. To date, elevated global protein synthesis as a result of FMRP loss has not been validated in the context of human neurons. Here, using an isogenic human stem cell-based model, we show that de novo protein synthesis is elevated in FMRP-deficient neural cells. We further show that this increase is associated with elevated ERK1/2 and Akt signalling and can be rescued by metformin treatment. Finally, we examined the effect of normalizing protein synthesis on phenotypic abnormalities in FMRP-deficient neural cells. We find that treatment with metformin attenuates the increase in proliferation of FMRP-deficient neural progenitor cells but not the neuronal deficits in neurite outgrowth. The elevated level of protein synthesis and the normalization of neural progenitor proliferation by metformin treatment were validated in additional control and FXS patient-derived hiPSC lines. Overall, our results validate that loss of FMRP results in elevated de novo protein synthesis in human neurons and suggest that approaches targeting this abnormality are likely to be of partial therapeutic benefit in FXS.

Highlights

  • Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is the leading genetic cause of intellectual (ID) and autism spectrum disorders (ASD) [1]

  • This in turn results in an elevation of global protein synthesis that has been observed in multiple brain regions of FXS animal models [6, 7]. mGluR receptors activate the phophoinositide-3kinase-Akt signalling to mechanistic target of Rapamycin complex 1 and/or Ras-Raf activation leading to a hyper-sensitized extracellular signal regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) pathway

  • Transcriptome profiling analysis reveals dysregulation of protein synthesis-related pathways in FMRP-deficient neural cells We previously reported transcriptome-wide profiling in FMR1 knockout isogenic neurons derived from H1 human embryonic stem cells to identify key molecular signatures associated with neurodevelopmental deficits in FXS [17]

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Summary

Introduction

Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is the leading genetic cause of intellectual (ID) and autism spectrum disorders (ASD) [1]. Studies in Fmr knockout (KO) mice have shown that absence of FMRP leads to abnormal signalling of cell-surface receptor pathways, of which metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGluR5) has been the most widely studied This in turn results in an elevation of global protein synthesis that has been observed in multiple brain regions of FXS animal models [6, 7]. These include several mGluR5 antagonists, GABA agonists, statins, lithium and ribosomal protein tyrosine kinase S6 (S6K) inhibitors [8, 10,11,12,13]

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