Abstract
Predicting clinical therapeutic outcomes from animal studies using conserved electrophysiological phenotypes could facilitate developing treatments for neuropsychiatric disorders. Alpha oscillations in human resting-state electroencephalogram recordings are altered in many disorders, but whether these disruptions exist in mouse models is unknown. Here, we employed a uniform analytical method to show in males with fragile X syndrome (FXS) that alpha oscillations in humans and alpha-like oscillations in the visual cortex of Fmr1-/y mice are slowed, with a stronger phenotype in adults than juveniles and a juvenile-specific power phenotype in both species. We find that alpha-like oscillations are disrupted by deletion of Fmr1 in cortical excitatory neurons and glia, reflect differential activity of two classes of GABAergic interneurons, and are more sensitive to activation of GABAB receptors by Arbaclofen in wild-type than Fmr1-/y mice. Our framework reveals evolutionary conservation of alpha oscillation disruptions, enables a deeper understanding of FXS pathophysiology, and narrows the gap between treatment promise and practice.