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Environmental Enrichment Rescues Social Behavioral Deficits and Synaptic Abnormalities in Pten Haploinsufficient Mice

Amy E. Clipperton‐Allen, Angela Zhang, Ori S. Cohen, Damon T. Page

2021Genes12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Pten germline haploinsufficient (Pten+/−) mice, which model macrocephaly/autism syndrome, show social and repetitive behavior deficits, early brain overgrowth, and cortical–subcortical hyperconnectivity. Previous work indicated that altered neuronal connectivity may be a substrate for behavioral deficits. We hypothesized that exposing Pten+/− mice to environmental enrichment after brain overgrowth has occurred may facilitate adaptation to abnormal “hard-wired” connectivity through enhancing synaptic plasticity. Thus, we reared Pten+/− mice and their wild-type littermates from weaning under either standard (4–5 mice per standard-sized cage, containing only bedding and nestlet) or enriched (9–10 mice per large-sized cage, containing objects for exploration and a running wheel, plus bedding and nestlet) conditions. Adult mice were tested on social and non-social assays in which Pten+/− mice display deficits. Environmental enrichment rescued sex-specific deficits in social behavior in Pten+/− mice and partially rescued increased repetitive behavior in Pten+/− males. We found that Pten+/− mice show increased excitatory and decreased inhibitory pre-synaptic proteins; this phenotype was also rescued by environmental enrichment. Together, our results indicate that environmental enrichment can rescue social behavioral deficits in Pten+/− mice, possibly through normalizing the excitatory synaptic protein abundance.

Topics & Concepts

PTENHaploinsufficiencyEnvironmental enrichmentExcitatory postsynaptic potentialNeuroscienceBiologyAutismPhenotypePsychologyCell biologyInhibitory postsynaptic potentialDevelopmental psychologyGeneticsGenePI3K/AKT/mTOR pathwaySignal transductionAutism Spectrum Disorder ResearchGenetics and Neurodevelopmental DisordersPluripotent Stem Cells Research