285 resultados para gephyrin, synapse


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Neuronen haben für die Informationsübertragung untereinander spezielle Strukturen entwickelt, welche als Synapsen bezeichnet werden. Um eine schnelle und präzise synaptische Signalübertragung zu gewährleisten, ist eine hohe Konzentration von Neurotransmitter-regulierten Ionenkanälen in der postsynaptischen Plasmamembran notwendig. Die spezifische Verankerung der Rezeptoren wird durch intrazelluläre Proteine der Postsynapse vermittelt. Das periphere Membranprotein Gephyrin spielt eine essentielle Rolle in der synaptischen Lokalisation von Glyzin- und GABAA-Rezeptoren an inhibitorischen Synapsen. Um das postsynaptische Netzwerk zu stabilisieren, ist eine Interaktion von Gephyrin mit Proteinen der Mikrofilamente und der Mikrotubuli nötig. In der vorliegenden Arbeit sollte analysiert werden, wie Gephyrin mit dem Aktin-Zytoskelett interagiert, und ob die Größe und Stabilität neuronaler Gephyrincluster durch das Aktin-Zytoskelett reguliert wird. Dies wurde mittels Expression von GFP-Gephyrin-Konstrukten in HEK293T-Zellen und Aktin-depolymerisierende Alkaloidbehandlung von hippokampalen Primärkulturzellen untersucht. Der Einfluss unterschiedlicher Signalkaskaden auf die Lokalisation und Funktionalität von GABAA- oder Glyzin-Rezeptoren wurde bereits intensiv untersucht, jedoch für Rezeptor-assoziierte Proteine wie Gephyrin existierten nur wenig relevante Daten. Ein weiteres Ziel war daher, durch pharmakologische Beeinflussung von Schlüsselenzymen in hippokampalen Primärkulturen jene Signalwege zu identifizieren, die am Transport von Gephyrin, seiner Stabilisierung im postsynaptischen Netzwerk und seinem Abbau beteiligt sind. Im Verlauf der Arbeit konnte belegt werden, dass das Aktin-regulierende Phosphoprotein ena/VASP als Adapter die Interaktion von Gephyrin mit F-Aktin vermittelt, und dass diese Bindung ausreicht, um Gephyrin an das Aktin-Zytoskelett zu rekrutieren. Entgegen früheren Veröffentlichungen konnte die Bindung von ena/VASP im Bereich der sog. Linkerregion von Gephyrin nachgewiesen werden. Aktin-depolymerisierende Alkaloidbehandlungen von hippokampalen Neuronen bestätigten, das die Lokalisation von Gephyrin an sich entwickelnden inhibitorischen Kontakten von einem intakten Mikrofilamentsystem abhängig zu sein scheint. Das Aktin-Zytoskelett könnte somit eine transiente Rolle in der Ausbildung und Stabilisierung des Gephyrin-Netzwerkes in der frühen Entwicklung von inhibitorischen GABAergen Synapsen haben, während die Abhängigkeit der synaptisch-lokalisierten Gephyrincluster vom Aktin-Zytoskelett mit steigender neuronaler Differenzierung abnimmt. Zusätzlich konnte erstmals der Einfluss einzelner Signaltransduktionskaskaden auf die synaptische Lokalisation von Gephyrin nachgewiesen werden. Dabei hatte die Inhibition der Protein- Phosphatasen 1 und 2A eine Destabilisierung synaptisch-lokalisierter Gephyrincluster bei gleichzeitigem Anstieg der zytoplasmatischen Immunreaktivität zur Folge. Dies ist möglicherweise auf eine Hyperphosphorylierung wichtiger Sequenzabschnitten von Gephyrin zurückzuführen, wobei Änderungen im Phosphorylierungsstatus der Linkerregion von Gephyrin unter anderem die Assoziation mit dem Zytoskelett beeinträchtigen oder lösen könnten. Umgekehrt könnte eine Dephosphorylierung möglicherweise die Stabilität der Vernetzung erhöht. Kopräzipitationsstudien konnten zusätzlich nachweisen, dass Gephyrin, PP1 und PP2A nicht nur gemeinsam an inhibitorischen Synapsen vorliegen, sondern dass eine direkte Interaktion besteht. Dabei handelt es sich um den ersten Nachweis einer direkten Bindung von Gephyrin an Ser/Thr-Phosphatasen. Die Komplexbildung von PP1 und PP2A mit Gephyrin könnten der Regulation des Phosphorylierungsgrades dienen. Der genaue Mechanismus wird jedoch in weiteren Experimenten zu untersuchen sein.

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γ-Aminobutyric acid type A receptors (GABAARs) are ligand-gated chloride channels that exist in numerous distinct subunit combinations. At postsynaptic membrane specializations, different GABAAR isoforms colocalize with the tubulin-binding protein gephyrin. However, direct interactions of GABAAR subunits with gephyrin have not been reported. Recently, the GABAAR-associated protein GABARAP was found to bind to the γ2 subunit of GABAARs. Here we show that GABARAP interacts with gephyrin in both biochemical assays and transfected cells. Confocal analysis of neurons derived from wild-type and gephyrin-knockout mice revealed that GABARAP is highly enriched in intracellular compartments, but not at gephyrin-positive postsynaptic membrane specializations. Our data indicate that GABARAP–gephyrin interactions are not important for postsynaptic GABAAR anchoring but may be implicated in receptor sorting and/or targeting mechanisms. Consistent with this idea, a close homolog of GABARAP, p16, has been found to function as a late-acting intra-Golgi transport factor.

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As the key neuron-to-neuron interface, the synapse is involved in learning and memory, including traumatic memories during times of stress. However, the signal transduction mechanisms by which stress mediates its lasting effects on synapse transmission and on memory are not fully understood. A key component of the stress response is the increased secretion of adrenal steroids. Adrenal steroids (e.g., cortisol) bind to genomic mineralocorticoid and glucocorticoid receptors (gMRs and gGRs) in the cytosol. In addition, they may act through membrane receptors (mMRs and mGRs), and signal transduction through these receptors may allow for rapid modulation of synaptic transmission as well as modulation of membrane ion currents. mMRs increase synaptic and neuronal excitability; mechanisms include the facilitation of glutamate release through extracellular signal-regulated kinase signal transduction. In contrast, mGRs decrease synaptic and neuronal excitability by reducing calcium currents through N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors and voltage-gated calcium channels by way of protein kinase A- and G protein-dependent mechanisms. This body of functional data complements anatomical evidence localizing GRs to the postsynaptic membrane. Finally, accumulating data also suggest the possibility that mMRs and mGRs may show an inverted U-shaped dose response, whereby glutamatergic synaptic transmission is increased by low doses of corticosterone acting at mMRs and decreased by higher doses acting at mGRs. Thus, synaptic transmission is regulated by mMRs and mGRs, and part of the stress signaling response is a direct and bidirectional modulation of the synapse itself by adrenal steroids.

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Highly sensitive biosensor for detection of acetylcholine (ACh) and competitive acetylcholinesterase (AChE) inhibitor, eserine, is investigated. Peculiar microelectronic configuration of an ion-sensitive field-effect transistor (ISFET) in addition to a right choice of the pH-transducing nanolayers allows recording a response of the enzyme-modified ISFET (EnFET) to a wide range of ACh concentrations. We demonstrate a remarkable improvement of at least three orders of magnitude in dose response to ACh. Described bioelectronic system reveals clear response, when the catalytic activity of the immobilized AChE is inhibited in a reversible manner by eserine, competitive inhibitor of AChE. ©2007 IEEE.

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In this paper, a cellular neural network with depressing synapses for contrast-invariant pattern classification and synchrony detection is presented, starting from the impulse model of the single-electron tunneling junction. The results of the impulse model and the network are simulated using simulation program with integrated circuit emphasis (SPICE). It is demonstrated that depressing synapses should be an important candidate of robust systems since they exhibit a rapid depression of excitatory postsynaptic potentials for successive presynaptic spikes.

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How do our brains transform the "blooming buzzing confusion" of daily experience into a coherent sense of self that can learn and selectively attend to important information? How do local signals at multiple processing stages, none of which has a global view of brain dynamics or behavioral outcomes, trigger learning at multiple synaptic sites when appropriate, and prevent learning when inappropriate, to achieve useful behavioral goals in a continually changing world? How does the brain allow synaptic plasticity at a remarkably rapid rate, as anyone who has gone to an exciting movie is readily aware, yet also protect useful memories from catastrophic forgetting? A neural model provides a unified answer by explaining and quantitatively simulating data about single cell biophysics and neurophysiology, laminar neuroanatomy, aggregate cell recordings (current-source densities, local field potentials), large-scale oscillations (beta, gamma), and spike-timing dependent plasticity, and functionally linking them all to cognitive information processing requirements.

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Huntington's disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disease caused by the expansion of a poly-glutamine (poly-Q) stretch in the huntingtin (Htt) protein. Gain-of-function effects of mutant Htt have been extensively investigated as the major driver of neurodegeneration in HD. However, loss-of-function effects of poly-Q mutations recently emerged as potential drivers of disease pathophysiology. Early synaptic problems in the excitatory cortical and striatal connections have been reported in HD, but the role of Htt protein in synaptic connectivity was unknown. Therefore, we investigated the role of Htt in synaptic connectivity in vivo by conditionally silencing Htt in the developing mouse cortex. When cortical Htt function was silenced, cortical and striatal excitatory synapses formed and matured at an accelerated pace through postnatal day 21 (P21). This exuberant synaptic connectivity was lost over time in the cortex, resulting in the deterioration of synapses by 5 weeks. Synaptic decline in the cortex was accompanied with layer- and region-specific reactive gliosis without cell loss. To determine whether the disease-causing poly-Q mutation in Htt affects synapse development, we next investigated the synaptic connectivity in a full-length knock-in mouse model of HD, the zQ175 mouse. Similar to the cortical conditional knock-outs, we found excessive excitatory synapse formation and maturation in the cortices of P21 zQ175, which was lost by 5 weeks. Together, our findings reveal that cortical Htt is required for the correct establishment of cortical and striatal excitatory circuits, and this function of Htt is lost when the mutant Htt is present.

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© 2015 The Authors. Synapse elimination occurs in development, plasticity, and disease. Although the importance of synapse elimination has been documented in many studies, the molecular mechanisms underlying this process are unclear. Here, using the development of C. elegans RME neurons as a model, we have uncovered a function for the apoptosis pathway in synapse elimination. We find that the conserved apoptotic cell death (CED) pathway and axonal mitochondria are required for the elimination of transiently formed clusters of presynaptic components in RME neurons. This function of the CED pathway involves the activation of the actin-filament-severing protein, GSNL-1. Furthermore, we show that caspase CED-3 cleaves GSNL-1 at a conserved C-terminal region and that the cleaved active form of GSNL-1 promotes its actin-severing ability. Our data suggest that activation of the CED pathway contributes to selective elimination of synapses through disassembly of the actin filament network. Meng et al. find that activation of the cell death pathway in C. elegans neurons contributes to selective elimination of synapses through disassembly of the actin filament network.

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Epidermal growth factor receptor pathway substrate clone 15 (Eps15) is a protein implicated in endocytosis, endosomal protein sorting, and cytoskeletal organization. Its role is, however, still unclear, because of reasons including limitations of dominant-negative experiments and apparent redundancy with other endocytic proteins. We generated Drosophila eps15-null mutants and show that Eps15 is required for proper synaptic bouton development and normal levels of synaptic vesicle (SV) endocytosis. Consistent with a role in SV endocytosis, Eps15 moves from the center of synaptic boutons to the periphery in response to synaptic activity. The endocytic protein, Dap160/intersectin, is a major binding partner of Eps15, and eps15 mutants phenotypically resemble dap160 mutants. Analyses of eps15 dap160 double mutants suggest that Eps15 functions in concert with Dap160 during SV endocytosis. Based on these data, we hypothesize that Eps15 and Dap160 promote the efficiency of endocytosis from the plasma membrane by maintaining high concentrations of multiple endocytic proteins, including dynamin, at synapses.

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Intersectin is a multidomain dynamin-binding protein implicated in numerous functions in the nervous system, including synapse formation and endocytosis. Here, we demonstrate that during neurotransmitter release in the central synapse, intersectin, like its binding partner dynamin, is redistributed from the synaptic vesicle pool to the periactive zone. Acute perturbation of the intersectin-dynamin interaction by microinjection of either intersectin antibodies or Src homology 3 (SH3) domains inhibited endocytosis at the fission step. Although the morphological effects induced by the different reagents were similar, antibody injections resulted in a dramatic increase in dynamin immunoreactivity around coated pits and at constricted necks, whereas synapses microinjected with the GST (glutathione S-transferase)-SH3C domain displayed reduced amounts of dynamin in the neck region. Our data suggest that intersectin controls the amount of dynamin released from the synaptic vesicle cluster to the periactive zone and that it may regulate fission of clathrin-coated intermediates.

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Amphiphysin is a protein enriched at mammalian synapses thought to function as a clathrin accessory factor in synaptic vesicle endocytosis. Here we examine the involvement of amphiphysin in synaptic vesicle recycling at the giant synapse in the lamprey. We show that amphiphysin resides in the synaptic vesicle cluster at rest and relocates to sites of endocytosis during synaptic activity. It accumulates at coated pits where its SH3 domain, but not its central clathrin/AP-2-binding (CLAP) region, is accessible for antibody binding. Microinjection of antibodies specifically directed against the CLAP region inhibited recycling of synaptic vesicles and caused accumulation of clathrin-coated intermediates with distorted morphology, including flat patches of coated presynaptic membrane. Our data provide evidence for an activity-dependent redistribution of amphiphysin in intact nerve terminals and show that amphiphysin is a component of presynaptic clathrin-coated intermediates formed during synaptic vesicle recycling.

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It is now widely accepted that adult neurogenesis plays a fundamental role in hippocampal function. Neurons born in the adult dentate gyrus of the hippocampus undergo a series of events before they fully integrate in the network and eventually become undistinguishable from neurons born during embryogenesis. Adult hippocampal neurogenesis is strongly regulated by neuronal activity and neurotransmitters, and the synaptic integration of adult-born neurons occurs in discrete steps, some of which are very different from perinatal synaptogenesis. Here, we review the current knowledge on the development of the synaptic input and output of neurons born in the adult hippocampus, from the stem/progenitor cell to the fully mature neuron. We also provide insight on the regulation of adult neurogenesis by some neurotransmitters and discuss some specificities of the integration of new neurons in an adult environment. The understanding of the mechanisms regulating the synaptic integration of adult-born neurons is not only crucial for our understanding of brain plasticity, but also provides a framework for the manipulation and monitoring of endogenous adult neurogenesis as well as grafted cells, for potential therapeutic applications.

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Previous studies in Caenorhabditis elegans showed that RPM-1 (Regulator of Presynaptic Morphology-1) regulates axon termination and synapse formation. To understand the mechanism of how rpm-1 functions, we have used mass spectrometry to identify RPM-1 binding proteins, and have identified RAE-1 (RNA Export protein-1) as an evolutionarily conserved binding partner. We define a RAE-1 binding region in RPM-1, and show that this binding interaction is conserved and also occurs between Rae1 and the human ortholog of RPM-1 called Pam (protein associated with Myc). rae-1 loss of function causes similar axon and synapse defects, and synergizes genetically with two other RPM-1 binding proteins, GLO-4 and FSN-1. Further, we show that RAE-1 colocalizes with RPM-1 in neurons, and that rae-1 functions downstream of rpm-1. These studies establish a novel postmitotic function for rae-1 in neuronal development.