The intellectual disability PAK3 R67C mutation impacts cognitive functions and adult hippocampal neurogenesis

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Castillon, Charlotte | Gonzalez, Laurine | Domenichini, Florence | Guyon, Sandrine | da Silva, Kévin | Durand, Christelle, M. | Lestaevel, Philippe | Vaillend, Cyrille | Laroche, Serge | Barnier, Jean-Vianney | Poirier, Roseline

Edité par CCSD ; Oxford University Press (OUP) -

This is the accepted draft copy.. International audience. The link between mutations associated with intellectual disability (ID) and the mechanisms underlying cognitive dysfunctions remains largely unknown. Here, we focused on PAK3, a serine/threonine kinase whose gene mutations cause X-linked ID. We generated a new mutant mouse model bearing the missense R67C mutation of the Pak3 gene (Pak3-R67C), known to cause moderate to severe ID in humans without other clinical signs and investigated hippocampal-dependent memory and adult hippocampal neurogenesis. Adult male Pak3-R67C mice exhibited selective impairments in long-term spatial memory and pattern separation function, suggestive of altered hippocampal neurogenesis. A delayed-non-matching-to-place paradigm testing memory flexibility and proactive interference, reported here as being adult neurogenesis-dependent, revealed a hypersensitivity to high interference in Pak3-R67C mice. Analyzing adult hippocampal neurogenesis in Pak3-R67C mice reveals no alteration in the first steps of adult neurogenesis, but an accelerated death of a population of adult-born neurons during the critical period of 18-28 days after their birth. We then investigated the recruitment of hippocampal adult-born neurons after spatial memory recall. Post-recall activation of mature dentate granule cells in Pak3-R67C mice was unaffected, but a complete failure of activation of young DCX+ newborn neurons was found, suggesting they were not recruited during the memory task. Decreased expression of the KCC2b chloride co-transporter and altered dendritic development indicate that young adult-born neurons are not fully functional in Pak3-R67C mice. We suggest that these defects in the dynamics and learning-associated recruitment of newborn hippocampal neurons may contribute to the selective cognitive deficits observed in this mouse model of ID.

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