Astrocyte DISC1 contributes to cognitive function in a brain region-dependent manner

Author:

Shevelkin Alexey V1,Terrillion Chantelle E1,Hasegawa Yuto1,Mychko Olga A1,Jouroukhin Yan1,Sawa Akira12345,Kamiya Atsushi12,Pletnikov Mikhail V12

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

2. Solomon H. Snyder Department of Neuroscience

3. Department of Biomedical Engineering

4. Department of Genetic Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

5. Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21287, USA

Abstract

Abstract Our understanding of the contribution of genetic risk factors to neuropsychiatric diseases is limited to abnormal neurodevelopment and neuronal dysfunction. Much less is known about the mechanisms whereby risk variants could affect the physiology of glial cells. Our prior studies have shown that a mutant (dominant-negative) form of a rare but highly penetrant psychiatric risk factor, Disrupted-In-Schizophrenia-1 (DISC1), impairs metabolic functions of astrocytes and leads to cognitive dysfunction. In order to overcome the limitations of the mutant DISC1 model and understand the putative regional properties of astrocyte DISC1, we assessed whether knockdown of Disc1 (Disc1-KD) in mature mouse astrocytes of the prefrontal cortex (PFC) or the hippocampus would produce behavioral abnormalities that could be attributed to astrocyte bioenergetics. We found that Disc1-KD in the hippocampus but not PFC impaired trace fear conditioning in adult mice. Using the innovative deep learning approach and convolutional deep neural networks (cDNNs), ResNet50 or ResNet18, and single cell-based analysis, we found that Disc1-KD decreased the spatial density of astrocytes associated with abnormal levels and distribution of the mitochondrial markers and the glutamate transporter, GLAST. Disc1-KD in astrocytes also led to decreased expression of the glutamatergic and increased expression of the GABA-ergic synaptic markers, possibly via non-apoptotic activation of caspase 3 in neurons located within the individual territories of Disc1-KD astrocytes. Our results indicate that altered expression of DISC1 in astrocytes could impair astrocyte bioenergetics, leading to abnormalities in synaptic neurotransmission and cognitive function in a region-dependent fashion.

Funder

JHU Neuroscience Multiphoton Imaging Core

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics(clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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