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D-aspartate oxidase gene duplication induces social recognition memory deficit in mice and intellectual disabilities in humans

Authors :
Barbara Lombardo
Marco Pagani
Arianna De Rosa
Marcella Nunziato
Sara Migliarini
Martina Garofalo
Marta Terrile
Valeria D’Argenio
Alberto Galbusera
Tommaso Nuzzo
Annaluisa Ranieri
Andrea Vitale
Eleonora Leggiero
Anna Di Maio
Noemi Barsotti
Ugo Borello
Francesco Napolitano
Alessandra Mandarino
Marco Carotenuto
Uriel Heresco-Levy
Massimo Pasqualetti
Paolo Malatesta
Alessandro Gozzi
Francesco Errico
Francesco Salvatore
Lucio Pastore
Alessandro Usiello
Lombardo, Barbara
Pagani, Marco
DE ROSA, Arianna
Nunziato, Marcella
Migliarini, Sara
Garofalo, Martina
Terrile, Marta
D'Argenio, Valeria
Galbusera, Alberto
Nuzzo, Tommaso
Ranieri, Annaluisa
Vitale, Andrea
Leggiero, Eleonora
Di Maio, Anna
Barsotti, Noemi
Borello, Ugo
Napolitano, Francesco
Mandarino, Alessandra
Carotenuto, Marco
Heresco-Levy, Uriel
Pasqualetti, Massimo
Malatesta, Paolo
Gozzi, Alessandro
Errico, Francesco
Salvatore, Francesco
Pastore, Lucio
Usiello, Alessandro
De Rosa, Arianna
Source :
Translational psychiatry. 12(1)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The D-aspartate oxidase (DDO) gene encodes the enzyme responsible for the catabolism of D-aspartate, an atypical amino acid enriched in the mammalian brain and acting as an endogenous NMDA receptor agonist. Considering the key role of NMDA receptors in neurodevelopmental disorders, recent findings suggest a link between D-aspartate dysmetabolism and schizophrenia. To clarify the role of D-aspartate on brain development and functioning, we used a mouse model with constitutive Ddo overexpression and D-aspartate depletion. In these mice, we found reduced number of BrdU-positive dorsal pallium neurons during corticogenesis, and decreased cortical and striatal gray matter volume at adulthood. Brain abnormalities were associated with social recognition memory deficit at juvenile phase, suggesting that early D-aspartate occurrence influences neurodevelopmental related phenotypes. We corroborated this hypothesis by reporting the first clinical case of a young patient with severe intellectual disability, thought disorders and autism spectrum disorder symptomatology, harboring a duplication of a chromosome 6 region, including the entire DDO gene.

Details

ISSN :
21583188
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Translational psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b4bd6dbb78638ebe52a8049a78d43bdd