nELAVL phosphorylation by CDKL5 regulates RNA metabolism and condensates communication to promote experience-dependent maturation of the visual cortex
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Mutations in Cyclin-Dependent Kinase-Like 5 (CDKL5) cause CDKL5 deficiency disorder (CDD), an X-linked neurodevelopmental condition. Through a phosphoproteomic screen, we identified the neuron-specific nELAVL family of RNA-binding proteins as direct activity-dependent substrates of CDKL5. In support of this regulatory axis, single-nuclei transcriptomics of Cdkl5 knockout (KO) cortices revealed an enriched reduction in activity-dependent mRNAs. Mechanistically, we show that nELAVL proteins undergo phase separation to form biomolecular condensates, the size of which is gated by CDKL5 phosphorylation. Loss of CDKL5 leads to enlarged nELAVL condensates, which exhibit reduced binding affinity for the target mRNA Fos , resulting in its accelerated degradation. This disruption extends to inter-condensate communication: phosphodeficient nELAVL show diminished interaction with P-bodies, which themselves become enlarged in CDD mutant iNeurons. Functionally, the absence of nELAVL phosphorylation recapitulates the deficits in experience-dependent visual function observed in Cdkl5 KO mice. Our findings establish a critical molecular mechanism by which CDKL5-mediated phosphorylation governs mRNA metabolism by tuning the properties of nELAVL condensates and their communication with other biomolecular condensates, ultimately promoting experience-dependent maturation of the visual cortex.