Abstract

Neurodevelopmental diseases such as the Rett syndrome (RTT) have received renewed attention, since the mechanisms involved may underlie a broad range of neuropsychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia and autism. In vertebrates early stages in the functional development of neurons and neuronal networks are difficult to study. Embryonic stem cell-derived neurons provide an easily accessible tool to investigate neuronal differentiation and early network formation. We used in vitro cultures of neurons derived from murine embryonic stem cells missing the methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 (MECP2) gene (MeCP2-/y) and from wild type cells of the corresponding background. Cultures were assessed using whole-cell patch-clamp electrophysiology and immunofluorescence. We studied the functional maturation of developing neurons and the activity of the synaptic connections they formed. Neurons exhibited minor differences in the developmental patterns for their intrinsic parameters, such as resting membrane potential and excitability; with the MeCP2-/y cells showing a slightly accelerated development, with shorter action potential half-widths at early stages. There was no difference in the early phase of synapse development, but as the cultures matured, significant deficits became apparent, particularly for inhibitory synaptic activity. MeCP2-/y embryonic stem cell-derived neuronal cultures show clear developmental deficits that match phenotypes observed in slice preparations and thus provide a compelling tool to further investigate the mechanisms behind RTT pathophysiology.

Highlights

  • Rett (1966) described an unusual neurodevelopmental disorder in girls, called Rett syndrome (RTT)

  • Networks formed by neurons differentiated from methyl-CpG-protein 2 (MeCP2)-/y Murine embryonic stem cell (mES) cells show clear functional deficits compared to wt cultures

  • Both overall excitatory- and inhibitory synaptic activity was clearly significantly lower in MeCP2-/y compared to wt cultures

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Summary

Introduction

Rett (1966) described an unusual neurodevelopmental disorder in girls, called Rett syndrome (RTT). Children develop normally for 6–18 months after birth, reaching the usual motor, language and social milestones. This brief period of developmental progress is followed by stagnation with growth arrest and microcephaly. During the following rapid regression phase, the previously acquired skills are lost and a variety of neurological symptoms develop. These include sleep disturbances, problems with gait, decelerated head growth, breathing arrhythmia, stereotypical hand movements, loss of motor coordination, and seizures (Zoghbi, 2003; Moretti and Zoghbi, 2006; Chahrour and Zoghbi, 2007)

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