DIKUL - logo
E-viri
Recenzirano Odprti dostop
  • ANK2 autism mutation target...
    Yang, Rui; Walder-Christensen, Kathryn K.; Kim, Namsoo; Wu, Danwei; Lorenzo, Damaris N.; Badea, Alexandra; Jiang, Yong-Hui; Yin, Henry H.; Wetsel, William C.; Bennett, Vann

    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS, 07/2019, Letnik: 116, Številka: 30
    Journal Article

    Giant ankyrin-B (ankB) is a neurospecific alternatively spliced variant of ANK2, a high-confidence autism spectrum disorder (ASD) gene. We report that a mouse model for human ASD mutation of giant ankB exhibits increased axonal branching in cultured neurons with ectopic CNS axon connectivity, as well as with a transient increase in excitatory synapses during postnatal development. We elucidate a mechanism normally limiting axon branching, whereby giant ankB localizes to periodic axonal plasma membrane domains through L1 cell-adhesion molecule protein, where it couples microtubules to the plasma membrane and prevents microtubule entry into nascent axon branches. Giant ankB mutation or deficiency results in a dominantly inherited impairment in selected communicative and social behaviors combined with superior executive function. Thus, gain of axon branching due to giant ankB-deficiency/mutation is a candidate cellular mechanism to explain aberrant structural connectivity and penetrant behavioral consequences in mice as well as humans bearing ASD-related ANK2 mutations.