Lithium normalizes ASD-related neuronal, synaptic, and behavioral phenotypes in DYRK1A-knockin mice

Mol Psychiatry. 2024 Dec 5. doi: 10.1038/s41380-024-02865-2. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Dyrk1A deficiency is linked to various neurodevelopmental disorders, including developmental delays, intellectual disability (ID) and autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Haploinsufficiency of Dyrk1a in mice reportedly leads to ASD-related phenotypes. However, the key pathological mechanisms remain unclear and human DYRK1A mutations remain uncharacterized in mice. Here, we generated and studied Dyrk1a-knockin mice carrying a human ASD patient mutation (Ile48LysfsX2; Dyrk1a-I48K mice). These mice display severe microcephaly, social and cognitive deficits, dendritic shrinkage, excitatory synaptic deficits, and altered phospho-proteomic patterns enriched for multiple signaling pathways and synaptic proteins. Early chronic lithium treatment of newborn mutant mice rescues the brain volume, behavior, dendritic, synaptic, and signaling/synapse phospho-proteomic phenotypes at juvenile and adult stages. These results suggest that signaling/synaptic alterations contribute to the phenotypic alterations seen in Dyrk1a-I48K mice, and that early correction of these alterations by lithium treatment has long-lasting effects in preventing juvenile and adult-stage phenotypes.