Disrupted diencephalon development and neuropeptidergic pathways in zebrafish with autism-risk mutations.

Publication date: Jun 10, 2025

Hundreds of human mutations are linked to autism and related disorders, yet the functions of many of these mutated genes during vertebrate neurodevelopment are unclear. We generated 27 zebrafish mutants with presumptive protein-truncating mutations or specific missense variants corresponding to autism-risk alleles in 17 human genes. We observed baseline and stimulus-driven behavioral changes at larval stages, as well as social behavior differences in lines tested as juveniles. Imaging whole-brain activity revealed a near identical activity map for mutations in the unrelated genes kmt5b and hdlbpa, defined by increased activity mainly in the thalamus and mesencephalon. Mutating 7 of the 17 risk genes resulted in substantial brain size differences, localized to the diencephalon in three cases and more widespread in others. Using RNA sequencing, we further defined molecular drivers of the observed phenotypes for three mutants, identifying targetable disruptions in neuropeptide signaling, neuronal maturation, and cell proliferation. This multimodal screen nominated brain regions, cell types, and molecular pathways that may contribute to autism susceptibility.

Concepts Keywords
Autism Animals
Mutants autism spectrum disorder
Proc Autistic Disorder
Protein CRISPR/Cas9
Zebrafish Diencephalon
diencephalon
Disease Models, Animal
Humans
Mutation
neuropeptide
Neuropeptides
Neuropeptides
Signal Transduction
Zebrafish
zebrafish
Zebrafish Proteins
Zebrafish Proteins

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH autism
disease MESH autism spectrum disorder
disease MESH Disease Models Animal
pathway REACTOME Signal Transduction

Original Article

(Visited 7 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *