- Yu, Diankun;
- Li, Tao;
- Delpech, Jean-Christophe;
- Zhu, Beika;
- Kishore, Priya;
- Koshi, Tatsuhiro;
- Luo, Rong;
- Pratt, Karishma JB;
- Popova, Galina;
- Nowakowski, Tomasz J;
- Villeda, Saul A;
- Piao, Xianhua
Parvalbumin-positive (PV+) interneurons play a critical role in maintaining circuit rhythm in the brain, and their reduction is implicated in autism spectrum disorders. Animal studies demonstrate that maternal immune activation (MIA) leads to reduced PV+ interneurons in the somatosensory cortex and autism-like behaviors. However, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain largely unknown. Here, we show that MIA down-regulates microglial Gpr56 expression in fetal brains in an interleukin-17a-dependent manner and that conditional deletion of microglial Gpr56 [Gpr56 conditional knockout (cKO)] mimics MIA-induced PV+ interneuron defects and autism-like behaviors in offspring. We further demonstrate that elevated microglial tumor necrosis factor-α expression is the underlying mechanism by which MIA and Gpr56 cKO impair interneuron generation. Genetically restoring Gpr56 expression in microglia ameliorates PV+ interneuron deficits and autism-like behaviors in MIA offspring. Together, our study demonstrates that microglial GPR56 plays an important role in PV+ interneuron development and serves as a salient target of MIA-induced neurodevelopmental disorders.