Immunity Genes May Play a Role in Down Syndrome

Extra copies of four interferon receptor genes found on human chromosome 21 trigger developmental changes in a mouse model of Down syndrome.

Written byKamal Nahas, PhD
| 4 min read
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Down syndrome occurs when an embryo inherits an extra copy of chromosome 21, leading to overexpression of the genes it carries.1 Scientists have yet to explore how these extra gene copies drive Down syndrome, but a team of geneticists led by Katherine Waugh at the University of Colorado recently revealed the part played by four interferon receptor genes. In a mouse study published in Nature Genetics, they outlined the influence of these genes, suggesting that it may become possible to ease Down syndrome’s co-occurring conditions by blocking interferon signaling.2,3

“I’m not trying to fix Down syndrome or prevent it,” said Waugh. “I’m trying to help everyone with Down syndrome live their happiest, healthiest lives.”

Interferons are proteins secreted from cells that signal the immune system to fight cancer and infections.4 Extra copies of interferon receptors boost interferon signaling in cells of people with Down syndrome, but it was not clear whether this contributes to developmental changes.5

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See also “Why Viral Infections Are More Severe in People with Down Syndrome

In search for a causal link, the researchers turned to the Dp16 mouse model of Down syndrome. It’s challenging to model Down syndrome since the genes on the human chromosome 21 are spread across three different chromosomes in mice. The mouse chromosome 16 carries the largest fraction of these genes, 120 of which have extra copies in the Dp16 mouse, including the cluster of four interferon receptor genes that Waugh wanted to explore. Dp16 is less severe than other mouse models of Down syndrome, and Waugh noted that these mice vary in the characteristics they display, nicely mimicking the range of severity seen in people with the syndrome.

By using CRISPR-Cas9 technology, the team deleted the four interferon receptor genes in Dp16 mice to determine whether they contribute to developmental changes. “We deleted 192 kilobases out of a chromosome in the mouse, which is not a small feat nowadays, and it certainly wasn’t when we embarked on this process years ago,” said Kelly Sullivan, a researcher at the University of Colorado and coauthor of the study.

Dp16 mice experienced various development changes in the heart, such as fusion of the left and right atria. The team showed that the interferon receptor genes were culprits in this aberrant development since mice lacking the extra genes were less likely to develop these heart conditions. Deleting these genes also prevented developmental changes in the brain and skull that were common in the model, including eye-twitching and a short skull.

Cross-sections of mouse hearts with and without atrial septa.
Fused atria are one of the developmental changes found in hearts taken from mouse models of Down syndrome.
Congwu Chi, adapted from Nature Genetics

The team also tested the cognitive abilities of the mice as learning and memory are commonly affected in people with Down Syndrome.6 The researchers challenged the mice to locate a hidden platform in a circular tub filled with water. The platform’s position changed before each session, and the team determined how quickly the mice clocked this change by tracing their swim routes.

For Joaquin Espinosa, a researcher at the University of Colorado and study coauthor, the Dp16 mice with the extra interferon genes learned more slowly to avoid checking the previous position, indicating that the extra gene copies are linked to cognitive difficulties.

These conditions were only partially reverted by deleting the extra genes, suggesting that extra copies of other genes contribute to the phenotype too. “It’s hard to completely weigh the influence of interferon receptor genes alone without the context of all other genes present on chromosome 21,” said Dusan Bogunovic, an immunologist with the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai who was not involved with the work. “We simply need to go one-by-one” deleting each extra gene, he said. “Even that does not give a full answer because genes work in epistasis with each other; they influence each other.”

See also “Study Points to Novel Role for Microglia in Down Syndrome

The findings reveal that the developmental changes seen in Dp16 mice are triggered by extra copies of interferon receptor genes; it is still unknown whether these genes have a similar effect in humans. Clinical trials that block interferon signaling can test the cause-effect relationship in people, Espinosa said.

These results also have important implications for the potential effects of interferon signaling on fetal development as they may explain changes in the heart observed in people born to mothers with autoimmune lupus.7

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Meet the Author

  • Kamal Nahas

    Kamal is a freelance science journalist based in the UK with a PhD in virology from the University of Cambridge. He enjoys writing about the quirky side of biology, like the remarkable extent to which we depend on our gut bacteria, as well as technological breakthroughs, including how artificial intelligence can be leveraged to design proteins. His work has also appeared in Live Science, Nature, New Scientist, Science, Scientific American, and other places. Find him at www.kamalnahas.com or on X @KLNahas.

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