α5GABAA receptor deficiency causes autism-like behaviors

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Abstract

The prevalence of autism spectrum disorders (ASDs), which affect over 1% of the population, has increased twofold in recent years. Reduced expression of GABAA receptors has been observed in postmortem brain tissue and neuroimaging of individuals with ASDs. We found that deletion of the gene for the α5 subunit of the GABAA receptor caused robust autism-like behaviors in mice, including reduced social contacts and vocalizations. Screening of human exome sequencing data from 396 ASD subjects revealed potential missense mutations in GABRA5 and in RDX, the gene for the α5GABAA receptor-anchoring protein radixin, further supporting a α5GABAA receptor deficiency in ASDs.

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Zurek, A. A., Kemp, S. W. P., Aga, Z., Walker, S., Milenkovic, M., Ramsey, A. J., … Orser, B. A. (2016). α5GABAA receptor deficiency causes autism-like behaviors. Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology, 3(5), 392–398. https://doi.org/10.1002/acn3.303

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