Targeting Peripheral Somatosensory Neurons to Improve Tactile-Related Phenotypes in ASD Models
Author(s) -
Lauren L. Orefice,
Jacqueline R. Mosko,
Danielle T. Morency,
Michael F. Wells,
Aniqa Tasnim,
Shawn M. Mozeika,
Mengchen Ye,
Anda M. Chirila,
Alan J. Emanuel,
Genelle Rankin,
Ryann M. Fame,
Maria K. Lehtinen,
Guoping Feng,
David D. Ginty
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2019.07.024
Subject(s) - somatosensory system , neuroscience , sensory system , autism , biology , sensory processing , phenotype , psychology , gene , developmental psychology , genetics
Somatosensory over-reactivity is common among patients with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) and is hypothesized to contribute to core ASD behaviors. However, effective treatments for sensory over-reactivity and ASDs are lacking. We found distinct somatosensory neuron pathophysiological mechanisms underlie tactile abnormalities in different ASD mouse models and contribute to some ASD-related behaviors. Developmental loss of ASD-associated genes Shank3 or Mecp2 in peripheral mechanosensory neurons leads to region-specific brain abnormalities, revealing links between developmental somatosensory over-reactivity and the genesis of aberrant behaviors. Moreover, acute treatment with a peripherally restricted GABA A receptor agonist that acts directly on mechanosensory neurons reduced tactile over-reactivity in six distinct ASD models. Chronic treatment of Mecp2 and Shank3 mutant mice improved body condition, some brain abnormalities, anxiety-like behaviors, and some social impairments but not memory impairments, motor deficits, or overgrooming. Our findings reveal a potential therapeutic strategy targeting peripheral mechanosensory neurons to treat tactile over-reactivity and select ASD-related behaviors.
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