Chronic bryostatin‑1 rescues autistic and cognitive phenotypes in the fragile X mice
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Cogram, Patricia
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Chronic bryostatin‑1 rescues autistic and cognitive phenotypes in the fragile X mice
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Abstract
Fragile X syndrome (FXS), an X-chromosome linked intellectual disability, is the leading monogenetic
cause of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), a neurodevelopmental condition that currently has no
specific drug treatment. Building upon the demonstrated therapeutic effects on spatial memory of
bryostatin-1, a relatively specific activator of protein kinase C (PKC)ε, (also of PKCα) on impaired
synaptic plasticity/maturation and spatial learning and memory in FXS mice, we investigated
whether bryostatin-1 might affect the autistic phenotypes and other behaviors, including open field
activity, activities of daily living (nesting and marble burying), at the effective therapeutic dose for
spatial memory deficits. Further evaluation included other non-spatial learning and memory tasks.
Interestingly, a short period of treatment (5 weeks) only produced very limited or no therapeutic
effects on the autistic and cognitive phenotypes in the Fmr1 KO2 mice, while a longer treatment
(13 weeks) with the same dose of bryostatin-1 effectively rescued the autistic and non-spatial
learning deficit cognitive phenotypes. It is possible that longer-term treatment would result in further
improvement in these fragile X phenotypes. This effect is clearly different from other treatment
strategies tested to date, in that the drug shows little acute effect, but strong long-term effects.
It also shows no evidence of tolerance, which has been a problem with other drug classes (mGluR5
antagonists, GABA-A and -B agonists). The results strongly suggest that, at appropriate dosing and
therapeutic period, chronic bryostatin-1 may have great therapeutic value for both ASD and FXS.
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FRAXA Research Foundation
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Scientific Reports | (2020) 10:18058
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