Sex-biased effects on hippocampal circuit development by perinatal SERT expression in CA3 pyramidal neurons

Author:

De Gregorio Roberto1,Subah Galadu2,Chan Jennifer C.3,Speranza Luisa4,Zhang Xiaolei2,Ramakrishnan Aarthi3,Shen Li3,Maze Ian3,Stanton Patric K.2,Sze Ji Y.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx 1 Department of Molecular Pharmacology , , NY 10461 , USA

2. New York Medical College 2 Department of Cell Biology & Anatomy , , Valhalla, NY 10595 , USA

3. Friedman Brain Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai 3 Nash Family Department of Neuroscience , , NY 10029 , USA

4. Albert Einstein College of Medicine 4 Dominick P. Purpura Department of Neuroscience , , Bronx, NY 10461 , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Neurodevelopmental disorders ranging from autism to intellectual disability display sex-biased prevalence and phenotypical presentations. Despite increasing knowledge about temporospatial cortical map development and genetic variants linked to neurodevelopmental disorders, when and how sex-biased neural circuit derailment may arise in diseased brain remain unknown. Here, we identify in mice that serotonin uptake transporter (SERT) in non-serotonergic neurons – hippocampal and prefrontal pyramidal neurons – confers sex-biased effects specifically during neural circuit development. A set of gradient-patterned CA3 pyramidal neurons transiently express SERT to clear extracellular serotonin, coinciding with hippocampal synaptic circuit establishment. Ablating pyramidal neuron SERT (SERTPyramidΔ) alters dendritic spine developmental trajectory in the hippocampus, and precipitates sex-biased impairments in long-term activity-dependent hippocampal synaptic plasticity and cognitive behaviors. Transcriptomic analyses identify sex-biased alterations in gene sets associated with autism, dendritic spine structure, synaptic function and male-specific enrichment of dysregulated genes in glial cells in early postnatal SERTPyramidΔ hippocampus. Our data suggest that SERT function in these pyramidal neurons underscores a temporal- and brain region-specific regulation of normal sex-dimorphic circuit development and a source for sex-biased vulnerability to cognitive and behavioral impairments. This article has an associated ‘The people behind the papers’ interview.

Funder

The National Institutes of Health

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology

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