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News from
Medical News Today Dec. 5, 2007
MIT: Missing Protein May Be Key To Autism
A missing brain protein may be one of
the culprits behind autism and other brain disorders, researchers at
MIT's Picower Institute for Learning and Memory report in the Dec. 6
issue of Neuron.
The protein helps synapses develop. Synapses--through which neurons
communicate with one other-underlie our ability to learn and
remember. Now Li-Huei Tsai, Picower Professor of Neuroscience at MIT,
has uncovered an enzyme that is key to that protein's activity.
Synapses are complex structures consisting of ion channels,
receptors and intricate protein complexes that all work together to
send and receive signals. Improperly formed synapses could lead to
mental retardation, and mutations in genes encoding certain synaptic
proteins are associated with autism.
Tsai studies a kinase (kinases are enzymes that change proteins)
called Cdk5. While Cdk5's best-known role is to help new neurons
form and migrate to their correct positions during brain development,
"emerging evidence supports an important role for Cdk5 at the
synapse," she said.
To gain a better understanding of how Cdk5 promotes synapse
formation, Tsai's lab looked into how Cdk5 interacts with
synapse-inducing proteins-in particular, a protein called CASK.
CASK--a key scaffolding protein-is one of the first proteins on the
scene of a developing synapse.
Scaffolding proteins such as CASK are like site managers, supporting
protein-to-protein interactions to ensure that the resulting
architecture is sound. Mutations in the genes responsible for Cdk5
and CASK have been found in mental retardation patients.
"We found that Cdk5 is critical for recruiting CASK to do its job
for developing synapses," Tsai said. "Without Cdk5, CASK was not in
the right place at the right time, and failed to interact with
essential presynaptic components. This, in turn, led to problems
with calcium influx." The flow of calcium in and out of neurons
affects processes central to nervous system development and
plasticity--its ability to change in response to experience.
Gene mutations and/or deletions in synaptic cell surface proteins
and molecules called neurexins and neuroligins have been associated
with autism. The problem with CASK recruitment investigated by the
Tsai laboratory creates the same result as these genetic changes.
The Picower study also provides the first molecular explanation of
how Cdk5, which also may go awry in neurodegenerative diseases such
as Alzheimer's, promotes synapse development.
"There are still a lot of unknowns," said Tsai, who is also a Howard
Hughes Medical Institute investigator. "Causes for psychiatric
disorders are still very unclear, but accumulating evidence strongly
suggests that alterations in the synaptogenesis program can lead to
these serious diseases."
In addition to Tsai and Picower researcher Benjamin A. Samuels,
co-authors are associated with Harvard Medical School; Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine; McLean Hospital in Belmont, Mass.;
and Academia Sinica in Taiwan.
This work is supported by the National Institute of Neurological
Disorders and Stroke (NINDS).
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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