AI Article Synopsis

  • Heterozygous loss-of-function mutations in the FOXP1 transcription factor are linked to autism, with studies showing D2 striatal projection neurons in Foxp1 mice exhibit increased excitability.
  • Research involving homozygous Foxp1 deletion demonstrated that this heightened excitability is driven by a reduction in specific potassium currents, indicating a postnatal mechanism at play.
  • The findings suggest FOXP1 plays a crucial role in regulating neuronal excitability in D2 neurons by modulating key ion channel transcripts, offering insights into potential therapeutic approaches for autism related to transcription factor issues.

Article Abstract

Heterozygous loss-of-function mutations in the transcription factor FOXP1 are strongly associated with autism. Dopamine receptor 2 expressing (D2) striatal projection neurons (SPNs) in heterozygous Foxp1 (Foxp1) mice have higher intrinsic excitability. To understand the mechanisms underlying this alteration, we examined SPNs with cell-type specific homozygous Foxp1 deletion to study cell-autonomous regulation by Foxp1. As in Foxp1 mice, D2 SPNs had increased intrinsic excitability with homozygous Foxp1 deletion. This effect involved postnatal mechanisms. The hyperexcitability was mainly due to down-regulation of two classes of potassium currents: inwardly rectifying (K) and leak (K). Single-cell RNA sequencing data from D2 SPNs with Foxp1 deletion indicated the down-regulation of transcripts of candidate ion channels that may underlie these currents: Kcnj2 and Kcnj4 for K and Kcnk2 for K. This Foxp1-dependent regulation was neuron-type specific since these same currents and transcripts were either unchanged, or very little changed, in D1 SPNs with cell-specific Foxp1 deletion. Our data are consistent with a model where FOXP1 negatively regulates the excitability of D2 SPNs through K and K by transcriptionally activating their corresponding transcripts. This, in turn, provides a novel example of how a transcription factor may regulate multiple genes to impact neuronal electrophysiological function that depends on the integration of multiple current types - and do this in a cell-specific fashion. Our findings provide initial clues to altered neuronal function and possible therapeutic strategies not only for FOXP1-associated autism but also for other autism forms associated with transcription factor dysfunction.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8255328PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41380-020-00995-xDOI Listing

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