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1.
We identified four PDZ domain-containing proteins, syntenin, PICK1, GRIP, and PSD95, as interactors with the kainate receptor (KAR) subunits GluR5(2b,) GluR5(2c), and GluR6. Of these, we show that both GRIP and PICK1 interactions are required to maintain KAR-mediated synaptic function at mossy fiber-CA3 synapses. In addition, PKC alpha can phosphorylate ct-GluR5(2b) at residues S880 and S886, and PKC activity is required to maintain KAR-mediated synaptic responses. We propose that PICK1 targets PKC alpha to phosphorylate KARs, causing their stabilization at the synapse by an interaction with GRIP. Importantly, this mechanism is not involved in the constitutive recycling of AMPA receptors since blockade of PDZ interactions can simultaneously increase AMPAR- and decrease KAR-mediated synaptic transmission at the same population of synapses.  相似文献   

2.
Calmodulin‐dependent kinase II (CaMKII) is key for long‐term potentiation of synaptic AMPA receptors. Whether CaMKII is involved in activity‐dependent plasticity of other ionotropic glutamate receptors is unknown. We show that repeated pairing of pre‐ and postsynaptic stimulation at hippocampal mossy fibre synapses induces long‐term depression of kainate receptor (KAR)‐mediated responses, which depends on Ca2+ influx, activation of CaMKII, and on the GluK5 subunit of KARs. CaMKII phosphorylation of three residues in the C‐terminal domain of GluK5 subunit markedly increases lateral mobility of KARs, possibly by decreasing the binding of GluK5 to PSD‐95. CaMKII activation also promotes surface expression of KARs at extrasynaptic sites, but concomitantly decreases its synaptic content. Using a molecular replacement strategy, we demonstrate that the direct phosphorylation of GluK5 by CaMKII is necessary for KAR‐LTD. We propose that CaMKII‐dependent phosphorylation of GluK5 is responsible for synaptic depression by untrapping of KARs from the PSD and increased diffusion away from synaptic sites.  相似文献   

3.
Kainate receptors (KARs) are one of the ionotropic glutamate receptors that mediate excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) with characteristically slow kinetics. Although mechanisms for the slow kinetics of KAR-EPSCs are not totally understood, recent evidence has implicated a regulatory role of KAR-associated proteins. Here, we report that decay kinetics of GluK2a-containing receptors is modulated by closely associated 14-3-3 proteins. 14-3-3 binding requires PKC-dependent phosphorylation of serine residues localized in the carboxyl tail of the GluK2a subunit. In transfected cells, 14-3-3 binding to GluK2a slows desensitization kinetics of both homomeric GluK2a and heteromeric GluK2a/GluK5 receptors. Moreover, KAR-EPSCs at mossy fiber-CA3 synapses decay significantly faster in the 14-3-3 functional knock-out mice. Collectively, these results demonstrate that 14-3-3 proteins are an important regulator of GluK2a-containing KARs and may contribute to the slow decay kinetics of native KAR-EPSCs.  相似文献   

4.
Both postsynaptic density and presynaptic active zone are structural matrix containing scaffolding proteins that are involved in the organization of the synapse. Little is known about the functional role of these proteins in the signaling of presynaptic receptors. Here we show that the interaction of the presynaptic metabotropic glutamate (mGlu) receptor subtype, mGlu7a, with the postsynaptic density-95 disc-large zona occludens 1 (PDZ) domain-containing protein, PICK1, is required for specific inhibition of P/Q-type Ca(2+) channels, in cultured cerebellar granule neurons. Furthermore, we show that activation of the presynaptic mGlu7a receptor inhibits synaptic transmission and this effect also requires the presence of PICK1. These results indicate that the scaffolding protein, PICK1, plays an essential role in the control of synaptic transmission by the mGlu7a receptor complex.  相似文献   

5.
The trafficking of ionotropic glutamate receptors to and from synaptic sites is regulated by proteins that interact with their cytoplasmic C-terminal domain. Profilin IIa (PfnIIa), an actin-binding protein expressed in the brain and recruited to synapses in an activity-dependent manner, was shown previously to interact with the C-terminal domain of the GluK2b subunit splice variant of kainate receptors (KARs). Here, we characterize this interaction and examine the role of PfnIIa in the regulation of KAR trafficking. PfnIIa directly and specifically binds to the C-terminal domain of GluK2b through a diproline motif. Expression of PfnIIa in transfected COS-7 cells and in cultured hippocampal neurons from PfnII-deficient mice decreases the level of extracellular of homomeric GluK2b as well as heteromeric GluK2a/GluK2b KARs. Our data suggest a novel mechanism by which PfnIIa exerts a dual role on the trafficking of KARs, by a generic inhibition of clathrin-mediated endocytosis through its interaction with dynamin-1, and by controlling KARs exocytosis through a direct and specific interaction with GluK2b.  相似文献   

6.
Ye B  Liao D  Zhang X  Zhang P  Dong H  Huganir RL 《Neuron》2000,26(3):603-617
The PDZ domain-containing proteins, such as PSD-95 and GRIP, have been suggested to be involved in the targeting of glutamate receptors, a process that plays a critical role in the efficiency of synaptic transmission and plasticity. To address the molecular mechanisms underlying AMPA receptor synaptic localization, we have identified several GRIP-associated proteins (GRASPs) that bind to distinct PDZ domains within GRIP. GRASP-1 is a neuronal rasGEF associated with GRIP and AMPA receptors in vivo. Overexpression of GRASP-1 in cultured neurons specifically reduced the synaptic targeting of AMPA receptors. In addition, the subcellular distribution of both AMPA receptors and GRASP-1 was rapidly regulated by the activation of NMDA receptors. These results suggest that GRASP-1 may regulate neuronal ras signaling and contribute to the regulation of AMPA receptor distribution by NMDA receptor activity.  相似文献   

7.
Long-term depression of kainate receptor-mediated synaptic transmission   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Park Y  Jo J  Isaac JT  Cho K 《Neuron》2006,49(1):95-106
Kainate receptors (KARs) have been shown to be involved in hippocampal mossy fiber long-term potentiation (LTP); however, it is not known if KARs are involved in the induction or expression of long-term depression (LTD), the other major form of long-term synaptic plasticity. Here we describe LTD of KAR-mediated synaptic transmission (EPSC(KA) LTD) in perirhinal cortex layer II/III neurons that is distinct from LTD of AMPAR-mediated transmission, which also coexists at the same synapses. Induction of EPSC(KA) LTD requires a rise in postsynaptic Ca(2+) but is independent of NMDARs or T-type voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels; however, it requires synaptic activation of inwardly rectifying KARs and release of Ca(2+) from stores. The synaptic KARs are regulated by tonically activated mGluR5, and expression of EPSC(KA) LTD occurs via a mechanism involving mGluR5, PKC, and PICK1 PDZ domain interactions. Thus, we describe the induction and expression mechanism of a form of synaptic plasticity, EPSC(KA) LTD.  相似文献   

8.
Xia J  Chung HJ  Wihler C  Huganir RL  Linden DJ 《Neuron》2000,28(2):499-510
Cerebellar LTD requires activation of PKC and is expressed, at least in part, as postsynaptic AMPA receptor internalization. Recently, it was shown that AMPA receptor internalization requires clathrin-mediated endocytosis and depends upon the carboxy-terminal region of GluR2/3. Phosphorylation of Ser-880 in this region by PKC differentially regulates the binding of the PDZ domain-containing proteins GRIP/ABP and PICK1. Peptides, corresponding to the phosphorylated and dephosphorylated GluR2 carboxy-terminal PDZ binding motif, were perfused in cerebellar Purkinje cells grown in culture. Both the dephospho form (which blocks binding of GRIP/ABP and PICK1) and the phospho form (which selectively blocks PICK1) attenuated LTD induction by glutamate/depolarization pairing, as did antibodies directed against the PDZ domain of PICK1. These findings indicate that expression of cerebellar LTD requires PKC-regulated interactions between the carboxy-terminal of GluR2/3 and PDZ domain-containing proteins.  相似文献   

9.
Cerebellar long-term depression (LTD) is a major form of synaptic plasticity that is thought to be critical for certain types of motor learning. Phosphorylation of the AMPA receptor subunit GluR2 on serine-880 as well as interaction of GluR2 with PICK1 have been suggested to contribute to the endocytic removal of postsynaptic AMPA receptors during LTD. Here, we show that targeted mutation of PICK1, the GluR2 C-terminal PDZ ligand, or the GluR2 PKC phosphorylation site eliminates cerebellar LTD in mice. LTD can be rescued in cerebellar cultures from mice lacking PICK1 by transfection of wild-type PICK1 but not by a PDZ mutant or a BAR domain mutant deficient in lipid binding, indicating the importance of these domains in PICK1 function. These results demonstrate that PICK1-GluR2 PDZ-based interactions and GluR2 phosphorylation are required for LTD expression in the cerebellum.  相似文献   

10.
Glutamate receptor interacting protein 1 (GRIP1) is a scaffold protein composed of seven PDZ (Postsynaptic synaptic density-95/Discs large/Zona occludens-1) domains. The protein plays important roles in the synaptic targeting of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptors. The interaction between GRIP1 PDZ7 and a Ras guanine nucleotide exchange factor, GRASP-1, regulates synaptic distribution of AMPA receptors. Here, we describe the three-dimensional structure of GRIP1 PDZ7 determined by NMR spectroscopy. GRIP1 PDZ7 contains a closed carboxyl group-binding pocket and a narrow alphaB/betaB-groove that is not likely to bind to classical PDZ ligands. Unexpectedly, GRIP1 PDZ7 contains a large solvent-exposed hydrophobic surface at a site distinct from the conventional ligand-binding alphaB/betaB-groove. NMR titration experiments show that GRIP1 PDZ7 binds to GRASP-1 via this hydrophobic surface. Our data uncover a novel PDZ domain-mediated protein interaction mode that may be responsible for multimerization of other PDZ domain-containing scaffold proteins.  相似文献   

11.

Kainate receptors (KARs) are a subfamily of ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs) mediating excitatory synaptic transmission. Cell surface expressed KARs modulate the excitability of neuronal networks. The transfer of iGluRs from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the cell surface requires occupation of the agonist binding sites. Here we used molecular modelling to produce a range of ligand binding domain (LBD) point mutants of GluK1–3 KAR subunits with and without altered agonist efficacy to further investigate the role of glutamate binding in surface trafficking and activation of homomeric and heteromeric KARs using endoglycosidase digestion, cell surface biotinylation and imaging of changes in intracellular Ca2+ concentration [Ca2+]i. Mutations of conserved amino acid residues in the LBD that disrupt agonist binding to GluK1–3 (GluK1-T675V, GluK2-A487L, GluK2-T659V and GluK3-T661V) reduced both the total expression levels and cell surface delivery of all of these mutant subunits compared to the corresponding wild type in transiently transfected human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK293) cells. In contrast, the exchange of non-conserved residues in the LBD that convert antagonist selectivity of GluK1–3 (GluK1-T503A, GluK2-A487T, GluK3-T489A, GluK1-N705S/S706N, GluK2-S689N/N690S, GluK3-N691S) did not alter the biosynthesis and trafficking of subunit proteins. Co-assembly of mutant GluK2 with an impaired LBD and wild type GluK5 subunits enables the cell surface expression of both subunits. However, [Ca2+]i imaging indicates that the occupancy of both GluK2 and GluK5 LBDs is required for the full activation of GluK2/GluK5 heteromeric KAR channels.

  相似文献   

12.
PDZ domain proteins of synapses   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
PDZ domains are protein-interaction domains that are often found in multi-domain scaffolding proteins. PDZ-containing scaffolds assemble specific proteins into large molecular complexes at defined locations in the cell. In the postsynaptic density of neuronal excitatory synapses, PDZ proteins such as PSD-95 organize glutamate receptors and their associated signalling proteins and determine the size and strength of synapses. PDZ scaffolds also function in the dynamic trafficking of synaptic proteins by assembling cargo complexes for transport by molecular motors. As key organizers that control synaptic protein composition and structure, PDZ scaffolds are themselves highly regulated by synthesis and degradation, subcellular distribution and post-translational modification.  相似文献   

13.
EMBO J (2013) 32: 496–510 doi:10.1038/emboj.2012.334; published online January042013Alteration of the efficacy of excitatory synaptic transmission between neurons is a critical element in the processes of learning, memory, and behaviour. Despite decades of research aimed at elucidating basic cellular mechanisms underlying synaptic plasticity, new pathways and permutations continue to be discovered. Carta et al (2013) now show that activation of the calcium/calmodulin dependent kinase II (CaMKII) induces an unusual postsynaptic form of long-term depression (LTD) at the hippocampal mossy fibre synapse by promoting lateral diffusion of kainate receptors (KARs), a family of ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs) that influence pyramidal neuron excitability. This report therefore reveals a new and mechanistically unique way of fine-tuning synaptic plasticity at this central synapse in the hippocampus.Information transfer within the nervous system is regulated at the synaptic level by diverse cellular mechanisms. Synaptic efficacy is not static (i.e., it is ‘plastic''), and the capacity to adjust the strength of communication between neurons in a network has been shown to be a critical component of diverse aspects of brain function that include many forms of behavioural learning (Martin et al, 2000). The complex means by which neurons adjust their synaptic properties in response to changes in local and global activity in the central nervous system has been the subject of intensive investigation spanning multiple decades (Malenka and Bear, 2004; Feldman, 2009). Nonetheless, new mechanisms underlying plasticity of excitatory and inhibitory synaptic transmission continue to be elucidated; these can vary depending on the experimental parameters for induction of plasticity, the particular type of synapse under investigation, and even the prior history of activation at the synapse. Long-term potentiation (LTP) and LTD of excitatory synaptic transmission are two well-known phenomena in which efficacy is increased or decreased, respectively, and at many synapses in the CNS occur through concomitant alterations in the number of postsynaptic iGluRs. The movement of excitatory receptors in and out of synapses, and more generally to and from the neuronal plasma membrane, is dictated by their association with a wide variety of scaffolding and chaperone proteins, whose interactions are often controlled by various protein kinases (Anggono and Huganir, 2012).It is generally appreciated now that long-term synaptic plasticity can be elicited by a variety of mechanisms even within a single type of synaptic connection. In addition to postsynaptic alterations in receptor content, for example, synaptic efficacy can also be tuned by regulated alterations in the probability of vesicular release of the neurotransmitter. Until recently, this presynaptic form of plasticity was thought to be the exclusive mechanism for altering excitatory synaptic strength at a morphologically unusual synapse in the hippocampus formed between large bouton-like presynaptic terminals arising from granule cell axons, or mossy fibres, and proximal dendrites on CA3 pyramidal neurons (Nicoll and Schmitz, 2005). These synaptic connections allow for single dentate granule cells to profoundly influence the likelihood of action potential firing in CA3 pyramidal neurons in a frequency-dependent manner, and for that reason have been referred to as ‘conditional detonator'' synapses (Henze et al, 2002). The precise mechanisms that lead to increased vesicular release probability following LTP-inducing stimulation of mossy fibre axons, including a potential role for retrograde signalling, remain the subject of debate, although there is general consensus that activation of presynaptic protein kinase A (PKA) is a key step in this form of synaptic plasticity (Figure 1A). Enhancing release probability impacts signalling through all three types of iGluRs present at mossy fibre synapses—AMPA, NMDA, and KARs. Recently, however, novel postsynaptic forms of mossy fibre plasticity were discovered in which induction protocols specifically increased the number of NMDA receptors (Kwon and Castillo, 2008; Rebola et al, 2008) or decreased the number of KARs (Selak et al, 2009), expanding the mechanistic repertoire at this historical site of focus of research on presynaptic LTP. Alterations in the synaptic content of particular iGluRs could serve as an additional means to fine-tune synaptic integration at the mossy fibre—CA3 synapse and therefore have important consequences for hippocampal network excitability.Open in a separate windowFigure 1Kainate receptor-dependent plasticity mechanisms at the hippocampal mossy fibre–CA3 synapse. (A) Activation of presynaptic receptors enhances glutamate release from the mossy fibre terminals. (B) A spike-timing-dependent plasticity protocol known to activate postsynaptic CaMKII results in long-term synaptic depression. CaMKII phosphorylates the GluK5 kainate receptor subunit, which uncouples the receptor from PSD-95 in the postsynaptic density. This leads to an increase in receptor mobility and diffusion away from the synapse. (C) Low-frequency stimulation of mossy fibres and activation of postsynaptic group 1 mGluRs leads to activation of PKC, which promotes the association of SNAP-25 to the GluK5 kainate receptor subunit and the subsequent endocytosis of synaptic receptors.In this issue, Carta et al (2013) identify a new postsynaptic mechanism for shaping mossy fibre plasticity that is specific to synaptic KARs, which serve to influence temporal integration of synaptic input as well as pyramidal neuron excitability through modulation of intrinsic ion channels. The authors paired postsynaptic depolarization of CA3 pyramidal neurons with a precisely timed presynaptic release of glutamate in a pattern that is known to produce LTP at many central synapses (Feldman, 2012). At mossy fibre synapses, however, this form of spike-timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) instead caused LTD of KAR-mediated excitatory synaptic potentials (KAR-LTD) while leaving AMPA receptor function unaltered (Figure 1B) (Carta et al, 2013). Using a series of genetic and pharmacological manipulations, Carta et al (2013) found that KAR-LTD was dependent upon the activation of postsynaptic KARs themselves, a rise in postsynaptic Ca2+, and CaMKII phosphorylation of a specific protein component of synaptic KARs, the GluK5 subunit. Unlike other mechanisms of postsynaptic mossy fibre plasticity, KAR-LTD was independent of NMDA or metabotropic glutamate receptor activation. Most surprisingly, KAR-LTD did not require receptor endocytosis from the plasma membrane, as is the case with most other forms of postsynaptic depression of excitatory transmission, including a distinct form of KAR-LTD reported previously (Selak et al, 2009) (Figure 1C). Instead, CaMKII-mediated phosphorylation of GluK5 subunits likely uncoupled receptors from the postsynaptic scaffolding protein PSD-95, which then led to enhanced lateral diffusion of KARs out of mossy fibre synapses. As KAR endocytosis was not altered in mossy fibre STDP, the activity-dependent reduction in KAR signalling was effectively limited to those receptors in the synapse. A molecular replacement strategy was employed using biolistic-based expression of mutant KARs in cultured hippocampal slices prepared from KAR knockout mice, which allowed Carta et al (2013) to corroborate their detailed biochemical studies by showing that reconstituted KAR currents in CA3 neurons expressing recombinant GluK5 phosphorylation site substitutions were unable to express KAR-LTD. In summary, KAR-mediated activation of CaMKII leads to phosphorylation of the GluK5 subunit and subsequent KAR-LTD through enhanced lateral mobility of synaptic receptors (Figure 1B).These findings are intriguing for several reasons. Most notably, they stand in stark contrast to studies in which CaMKII activation primarily triggers potentiation, rather than depression, of excitatory synaptic transmission at other synapses (Lisman et al, 2012). CaMKII recently was shown to cause diffusional trapping of AMPA receptor complexes within the postsynaptic density following phosphorylation of a closely associated auxiliary subunit, stargazin (Opazo et al, 2010), which is precisely the opposite of the effects of activation of the enzyme on KAR mobility at mossy fibre synapses. Further, these divergent consequences are both dependent upon carboxy-terminal PDZ interactions with scaffolding proteins, although in each case further research is needed to dissect out the relevant binding partners that control lateral mobility. It is of interest that KAR-LTD required synaptic activation of KARs to initiate signalling via CaMKII, which implies a tight coupling exists between KARs and the holoenzyme in the mossy fibre postsynaptic density. This observation also raises the possibility that activated CaMKII could phosphorylate other targets to effect other, yet-to-be-discovered, changes in synaptic function. Finally, the report by Carta et al expands our understanding of how excitatory synaptic transmission is fine-tuned at an important central synapse and underscores the fact that even well-trod ground (or synapses) continue to yield surprises that inform our understanding of the remarkable mechanistic diversity underlying synaptic plasticity in the CNS.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Many postsynaptic density proteins carrying postsynaptic density-95/discs large/zone occludens-1 (PDZ) domain(s) interact with glutamate receptors to control receptor dynamics and synaptic plasticity. Here we examined the expression of PDZ proteins, synapse-associated protein (SAP) 97, postsynaptic density (PSD)-95, chapsyn-110, GRIP1 and SAP102, in post-mortem brains of schizophrenic patients and control subjects, and evaluated their contribution to schizophrenic pathology. Among these PDZ proteins, SAP97 exhibited the most marked change: SAP97 protein levels were decreased to less than half that of the control levels specifically in the prefrontal cortex of schizophrenic patients. In parallel, its binding partner, GluR1, similarly decreased in the same brain region. The correlation between SAP97 and GluR1 levels in control subjects was, however, altered in schizophrenic patients. SAP102 levels were also significantly reduced in the hippocampus of schizophrenic patients, but this reduction was correlated with sample storage time and post-mortem interval. There were no changes in the levels of the other PDZ proteins in any of the regions examined. In addition, neuroleptic treatment failed to mimic the SAP97 change. These findings suggest that a phenotypic loss of SAP97 is associated with the postsynaptic impairment in prefrontal excitatory circuits of schizophrenic patients.  相似文献   

16.
The N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR), a major excitatory ligand-gated ion channel in the central nervous system (CNS), is a principal mediator of synaptic plasticity. Here we report that neuropilin tolloid-like 1 (Neto1), a complement C1r/C1s, Uegf, Bmp1 (CUB) domain-containing transmembrane protein, is a novel component of the NMDAR complex critical for maintaining the abundance of NR2A-containing NMDARs in the postsynaptic density. Neto1-null mice have depressed long-term potentiation (LTP) at Schaffer collateral-CA1 synapses, with the subunit dependency of LTP induction switching from the normal predominance of NR2A- to NR2B-NMDARs. NMDAR-dependent spatial learning and memory is depressed in Neto1-null mice, indicating that Neto1 regulates NMDA receptor-dependent synaptic plasticity and cognition. Remarkably, we also found that the deficits in LTP, learning, and memory in Neto1-null mice were rescued by the ampakine CX546 at doses without effect in wild-type. Together, our results establish the principle that auxiliary proteins are required for the normal abundance of NMDAR subunits at synapses, and demonstrate that an inherited learning defect can be rescued pharmacologically, a finding with therapeutic implications for humans.  相似文献   

17.
大脑中神经元突触间的信号传递是由许多神经递质受体介导的。在过去,Richard L.Huganir实验室一直致力于神经递质受体功能调节的分子机制。而最近,该实验室又聚焦到大脑中一种最主要的兴奋性受体的研究——谷氨酸受体。谷氨酸受体主要可以分为两大类:AMPA受体和NMDA受体。AMPA受体主要介导了快速的兴奋性突触传递;而NMDA受体则在神经可塑性和发育中起到重要作用。实验发现,AMPA受体和NMDA受体都可以被一系列的蛋白激酶磷酸化,而磷酸化的水平则直接影响了这些受体的功能特性,包括通道电导和受体膜定位等。AMPA受体磷酸化的水平同时还在学习和记忆的细胞模型中发生改变,如长时程增强(LTP)和长时程抑制(LTD)。此外,AMPA受体中GluR1亚单位的磷酸化对于各种形式的可塑性以及空间记忆的维持有重要的作用。实验室主要研究突触部位谷氨酸受体在亚细胞水平的定位和聚集的分子机制。最近,一系列可以直接或间接与AMPA和NMDA受体相互作用的蛋白质得以发现,其中包括一个新发现的蛋白家族GRIPs(glutamate receptor interacting proteins)。GRIPs可以直接和AMPA受体的GluR2/3亚单位的C端结合。GRIPs包含7个PDZ结构域,可以介导蛋白与蛋白直接的相互连接,从而把各个AMPA受体交互连接在一起并与其他蛋白相连。另外,GluR2亚单位的c端还可以和兴奋性突触中的蛋白激酶C结合蛋白(PICK1)的PDZ结构域相互作用。另外,GluR2亚单位的C端也可以与一种参与膜融合的蛋白NSF相互作用。这些与AMPA受体相互作用的蛋白质对于受体在膜上的运输以及定位有至关重要的作用。同时,受体与PICK1和GRIP的结合对于小脑运动学习中的LTD有重要作用。总体上说,该实验室发现了一系列可以调节神经递质受体功能的分子机制,这些工作提示受体功能的调节可能是?  相似文献   

18.
Using sequence homology searches, yeast two-hybrid assays and glutathione S-transferase (GST)-pull-down approaches we have identified a series of glutamate receptor subunits that interact differentially with the PDZ proteins GRIP, PICK1, and syntenin. GST-pull-down experiments identified more interactions than detected by yeast two-hybrid assays. We report several receptor-protein interactions, strong ones include: (i) GRIP and syntenin with mGluR7a, mGluR4a, and mGluR6; (ii) PICK1 and GRIP with mGluR3; and (iii) syntenin with all forms of GluR1-4 and mGluR7b. We further characterized the novel mGluR7a-GRIP interaction found both in yeast two-hybrid and GST-pull-down assays and observed that mGluR7a localization overlapped with GRIP with in hippocampal neurons. The wide range of targets for PICK1, GRIP, and syntenin suggests they may represent a molecular mechanism that can concentrate and/or regulate a number of different receptors at a common site on a synapse. These data also suggest that the structural determinants involved in PDZ interactions are more complex than originally envisaged.  相似文献   

19.
The acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs) are members of the DEG/ENaC superfamily of Na+ channels. Acid-gated cation currents have been detected in neurons from multiple regions of the brain including the cerebellum, but little is known about their molecular identity and function. Recently, one of ASICs (ASIC1a) was implicated in synaptic plasticity. In this study we examined the subcellular distribution of ASIC2a in rat cerebellum by immunostaining and confocal microscopy. Monoclonal antibodies for labeling of defined brain structures, for example, astroglia, Purkinje cell dendrites, nuclei, and presynaptic terminals were used for colocalization analyses. In the gray matter, the anti-ASIC2a antibody intensively stained dendrite branches of Purkinje cells evenly distributed throughout the entire molecular layer (ML). In the granule cell layer (GL), anti-ASIC2a antibody stained synaptic glomeruli. Neuronal localization of ASIC2a was confirmed by lack of co-staining with glial fibrillary acidic protein. Anti-ASIC2a staining in the ML colocalized with metabotropic glutamate receptor 1alpha (mGluR1alpha) in Purkinje cell dendrites and dendritic spines. Both proteins, mGluR1alpha and ASIC2a, were enriched in a crude synaptic membrane fraction prepared from cerebellum, suggesting synaptic expression of these proteins. Dual staining with anti-syntaxin 1A and anti-ASIC2a antibodies demonstrates characteristic complementary distribution of two proteins in both ML and GL. Because syntaxin 1A localized in presynaptic membranes and synaptic vesicles, complementary distribution with ASIC2a suggests postsynaptic localization of ASIC2a in these structures. This study shows specific localization of ASIC2a in both Purkinje and granule cell dendrites of the cerebellum and enrichment of ASIC2a in a crude cerebellar synaptic membrane fraction. The study is the first report of synaptic localization of ASIC2a in the CNS. The synaptic localization of ASIC2a in the cerebellum makes this channel a candidate for a role in motor coordination and learning.  相似文献   

20.
Trafficking of AMPA-type glutamate receptors (AMPAR) between endosomes and the postsynaptic plasma membrane of neurons plays a central role in the control of synaptic strength associated with learning and memory. The molecular mechanisms of its regulation remain poorly understood, however. Here we show by biochemical and atomic force microscopy analyses that NEEP21, a neuronal endosomal protein necessary for receptor recycling including AMPAR, is associated with the scaffolding protein GRIP1 and the AMPAR subunit GluR2. Moreover, the interaction between NEEP21 and GRIP1 is regulated by neuronal activity. Expression of a NEEP21 fragment containing the GRIP1-binding site decreases surface GluR2 levels and delays recycling of internalized GluR2, which accumulates in early endosomes and lysosomes. Infusion of this fragment into pyramidal neurons of hippocampal slices induces inward rectification of AMPAR-mediated synaptic responses, suggesting decreased GluR2 expression at synapses. These results indicate that NEEP21-GRIP1 binding is crucial for GluR2-AMPAR sorting through endosomes and their recruitment to the plasma membrane, providing a first molecular mechanism to differentially regulate AMPAR subunit cycling in internal compartments.  相似文献   

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