Abstract

SUMMARYFragile X syndrome (FXS), caused by loss of the fragile X mental retardation 1 (FMR1) product (FMRP), is the most common cause of inherited intellectual disability and autism spectrum disorders. FXS patients suffer multiple behavioral symptoms, including hyperactivity, disrupted circadian cycles, and learning and memory deficits. Recently, a study in the mouse FXS model showed that the tetracycline derivative minocycline effectively remediates the disease state via a proposed matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) inhibition mechanism. Here, we use the well-characterized Drosophila FXS model to assess the effects of minocycline treatment on multiple neural circuit morphological defects and to investigate the MMP hypothesis. We first treat Drosophila Fmr1 (dfmr1) null animals with minocycline to assay the effects on mutant synaptic architecture in three disparate locations: the neuromuscular junction (NMJ), clock neurons in the circadian activity circuit and Kenyon cells in the mushroom body learning and memory center. We find that minocycline effectively restores normal synaptic structure in all three circuits, promising therapeutic potential for FXS treatment. We next tested the MMP hypothesis by assaying the effects of overexpressing the sole Drosophila tissue inhibitor of MMP (TIMP) in dfmr1 null mutants. We find that TIMP overexpression effectively prevents defects in the NMJ synaptic architecture in dfmr1 mutants. Moreover, co-removal of dfmr1 similarly rescues TIMP overexpression phenotypes, including cellular tracheal defects and lethality. To further test the MMP hypothesis, we generated dfmr1;mmp1 double null mutants. Null mmp1 mutants are 100% lethal and display cellular tracheal defects, but co-removal of dfmr1 allows adult viability and prevents tracheal defects. Conversely, co-removal of mmp1 ameliorates the NMJ synaptic architecture defects in dfmr1 null mutants, despite the lack of detectable difference in MMP1 expression or gelatinase activity between the single dfmr1 mutants and controls. These results support minocycline as a promising potential FXS treatment and suggest that it might act via MMP inhibition. We conclude that FMRP and TIMP pathways interact in a reciprocal, bidirectional manner.

Highlights

  • Fragile X syndrome (FXS), the most common genetic determinant of cognitive impairment and autism spectrum disorders (Koukoui and Chaudhuri, 2007; Penagarikano et al, 2007), is caused solely by the loss of the fragile X mental retardation 1 (FMR1) gene product (FMRP) (Pieretti et al, 1991)

  • Consistent with the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) hypothesis, we show that tissue inhibitor of MMP (TIMP) overexpression fully restores normal neuromuscular junction (NMJ) synaptic architecture in the dfmr1 null mutant condition

  • The number of NMJ branches, defined as a process with ≥2 boutons, was significantly higher in the dfmr1 null mutants compared with control (Fig. 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

Fragile X syndrome (FXS), the most common genetic determinant of cognitive impairment and autism spectrum disorders (Koukoui and Chaudhuri, 2007; Penagarikano et al, 2007), is caused solely by the loss of the fragile X mental retardation 1 (FMR1) gene product (FMRP) (Pieretti et al, 1991). A great deal of investigation in FXS disease models supports the conclusion that FMRP plays a predominant role in the activity-dependent regulation of synaptic development and plasticity (Antar and Bassell, 2003; Auerbach and Bear, 2010; Costa-Mattioli et al, 2009; Huber et al, 2002; Pan et al, 2008; Tessier and Broadie, 2008; Tessier and Broadie, 2010; Waung and Huber, 2009; Zhang and Broadie, 2005). Given the high prevalence of this devastating neurological condition, pharmacological treatments for FXS have long been sought

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