A promising advance that continues Roberto Araya's legacy

By UdeMnouvelles
In 5 seconds An international collaboration involving the late UdeM neuroscientist highlights a new therapeutic target for Fragile X syndrome, a leading cause of autism and intellectual disability.
A neuron from the brain of a mouse that participated in the study.

A promising avenue for the treatment of Fragile X syndrome, the most common genetic cause of intellectual disability and autism in boys, has opened up thanks to a collaboration between researchers in the U.S. and Canada.

Published in the journal Neuron, the work involved the laboratory of neurology professor Carlos Portera-Cailliau of the University of California, Los Angeles, and that of the late neurosciences professor Roberto Araya at Université de Montréal.

Done on mice, the preclinical study shows that the EPAC2 protein is produced in greater quantities in the brains of those affected.

Blocking this protein improves both brain function and certain associated behaviours, including sensory hypersensitivity, social interactions, and seizure susceptibility. 

Because its expression is largely limited to the brain, EPAC2 represents a particularly compelling therapeutic target.

A pivotal role

Araya's laboratory played a pivotal role in this collaboration.

"Our team was called upon to conduct complex biochemical experiments aimed at characterizing the expression of the EPAC2 protein in neuronal synapses, as well as the cellular signals altered by the treatment," said Soledad Miranda-Rottmann, a co-author of the study and research professional in Araya's laboratory.

The collaboration grew out of a landmark 2023 article by Araya and his team on how the brain processes sensory signals in a model of the same syndrome.

Araya was a researcher at the Azrieli Research Centre of CHU Sainte-Justine and a professor in the Department of Neurosciences at UdeM. He died in May 2024, age 50.

His work contributed significantly to advancing knowledge in neuroscience, said the study's co-authors, who dedicated the work to his memory.

Read the official press release >>

Media requests

CHU Sainte-Justine
Université de Montréal
Phone: 514-343-6111, ext. 75930