PUBLICATION

Mosaic and non-mosaic protocadherin 19 mutation leads to neuronal hyperexcitability in zebrafish

Authors
Robens, B.K., Yang, X., McGraw, C.M., Turner, L.H., Robens, C., Thyme, S., Rotenberg, A., Poduri, A.
ID
ZDB-PUB-220424-28
Date
2022
Source
Neurobiology of disease   169: 105738 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Poduri, Annapurna, Thyme, Summer
Keywords
Anxiety, Epilepsy, Girls clustering epilepsy, Hyperexcitability, Inhibitory neurons, Learning and memory, Mosaicism, PCDH19, X-linked, Zebrafish
MeSH Terms
  • Animals
  • Cadherins/genetics
  • Epilepsy*/genetics
  • Female
  • Male
  • Mutation/genetics
  • Protocadherins
  • Zebrafish*
PubMed
35460869 Full text @ Neurobiol. Dis.
Abstract
Epilepsy is one of the most common neurological disorders. The X-linked gene PCDH19 is associated with sporadic and familial epilepsy in humans, typically with early-onset clustering seizures and intellectual disability in females but not in so-called 'carrier' males, suggesting that mosaic PCDH19 expression is required to produce epilepsy. To characterize the role of loss of PCDH19 function in epilepsy, we generated zebrafish with truncating pcdh19 variants. Evaluating zebrafish larvae for electrophysiological abnormalities, we observed hyperexcitability phenotypes in both mosaic and non-mosaic pcdh19+/- and pcdh19-/- mutant larvae. Thus, we demonstrate that the key feature of epilepsy-network hyperexcitability-can be modeled effectively in zebrafish, even though overt spontaneous seizure-like swim patterns were not observed. Further, zebrafish with non-mosaic pcdh19 mutation displayed reduced numbers of inhibitory interneurons suggesting a potential cellular basis for the observed hyperexcitability. Our findings in both mosaic and non-mosaic pcdh19 mutant zebrafish challenge the prevailing theory that mosaicism governs all PCDH19-related phenotypes and point to interneuron-mediated mechanisms underlying these phenotypes.
Genes / Markers
Figures
Show all Figures
Expression
Phenotype
Mutations / Transgenics
Human Disease / Model
Sequence Targeting Reagents
Fish
Antibodies
Orthology
Engineered Foreign Genes
Mapping