Activity deprivation modulates the Shank3/Homer1/mGluR5 signaling pathway to enable synaptic upscaling.

IF 4 2区 医学 Q1 NEUROSCIENCES
Andrea A Guerrero, Gina G Turrigiano
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Shank3 is an autism spectrum disorder-associated postsynaptic scaffold protein that links glutamate receptors to trafficking and signaling networks within the postsynaptic density. Shank3 is required for synaptic scaling, a form of homeostatic plasticity that bidirectionally modulates post-synaptic strength to stabilize neuronal activity. Shank3 undergoes activity-dependent phosphorylation/dephosphorylation at S1586/S1615, and dephosphorylation at these sites is critical for enabling synaptic upscaling. Here, we probe the molecular machinery downstream of Shank3 dephosphorylation that allows for synaptic upscaling in cultured rat neurons of either sex. We first show that a phosphomimetic mutant of Shank3 has reduced binding ability and interaction with long-form Homer1, a postsynaptic protein also crucial for scaling, and a known binding partner of Shank3. Since metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGluR5) has been shown to associate with Shank3 through long-form Homer1, we manipulated mGluR1 and mGluR5 signaling with either noncompetitive or competitive inhibitors and found that only competitive inhibition (which targets agonist-dependent signaling) impairs synaptic upscaling. Further, we found that mGluR5 activation rescues synaptic upscaling in the presence of phosphomimetic Shank3, and thus is downstream of Shank3 phosphorylation. Finally, we identify signaling pathways downstream of group I mGluRs that are necessary for upscaling. Altogether, these data show that activity-dependent dephosphorylation of Shank3 remodels the Shank3/Homer1/mGluR signaling pathway to favor agonist-dependent mGluR signaling, which is necessary to enable synaptic upscaling. More broadly, because downscaling is thought to require agonist-independent mGluR5 signaling, these findings demonstrate that synaptic up and downscaling rely on distinct functional configurations of the same signaling elements.Significance statement Synaptic scaling is a bidirectional, homeostatic form of synaptic plasticity that allows neural circuits to maintain stable function in the face of experience-dependent or developmental perturbations. Synaptic scaling up requires dephosphorylation of the Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)-associated synaptic scaffold protein Shank3, but how this dephosphorylation event enables scaling up was unknown. Here we show that dephosphorylation of Shank3 rearranges interactions between synaptic proteins to drive agonist-dependent signaling through metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs), and that this signaling is necessary for scaling up. These findings show that altered mGluR signaling is downstream of Shank3 during homeostatic plasticity, and raise the possibility that some human Shankopathies impair signaling through this important signaling pathway.

活动剥夺调节Shank3/Homer1/mGluR5信号通路,使突触升级。
Shank3是一种与自闭症谱系障碍相关的突触后支架蛋白,它将谷氨酸受体与突触后密度内的运输和信号网络联系起来。Shank3是突触缩放所必需的,突触缩放是一种稳态可塑性的形式,可以双向调节突触后强度以稳定神经元活动。Shank3在S1586/S1615位点发生活性依赖性磷酸化/去磷酸化,这些位点的去磷酸化对于突触升级至关重要。在这里,我们探索了Shank3去磷酸化下游的分子机制,该机制允许在培养的雌雄大鼠神经元中突触升级。我们首先发现,Shank3的一个拟磷突变体与长形Homer1的结合能力和相互作用降低,Homer1是一种突触后蛋白,对缩放也至关重要,是Shank3的已知结合伙伴。由于代谢性谷氨酸受体5 (mGluR5)已被证明通过长链Homer1与Shank3相关联,我们使用非竞争性或竞争性抑制剂来操纵mGluR1和mGluR5信号传导,并发现只有竞争性抑制(针对激动剂依赖的信号传导)会损害突触的升级。此外,我们发现mGluR5的激活可以在类似磷酸化的Shank3存在时挽救突触的升级,因此是Shank3磷酸化的下游。最后,我们确定了I组mGluRs下游的信号通路,这是升级所必需的。总之,这些数据表明,Shank3活性依赖性的去磷酸化重塑了Shank3/Homer1/mGluR信号通路,有利于激动剂依赖性的mGluR信号通路,这是实现突触升级所必需的。更广泛地说,因为缩小被认为需要不依赖于激动剂的mGluR5信号,这些发现表明突触的上升和下降依赖于相同信号元件的不同功能配置。突触缩放是一种双向的、内稳态形式的突触可塑性,它允许神经回路在面对经验依赖或发育扰动时保持稳定的功能。突触放大需要自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)相关突触支架蛋白Shank3的去磷酸化,但这种去磷酸化事件如何使突触放大尚不清楚。在这里,我们表明Shank3的去磷酸化重新排列突触蛋白之间的相互作用,通过代谢性谷氨酸受体(mGluRs)驱动激动剂依赖的信号传导,并且这种信号传导是扩大规模所必需的。这些发现表明,在稳态可塑性过程中,改变的mGluR信号通路位于Shank3的下游,并提出了一些人类shank病损害这一重要信号通路的可能性。
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来源期刊
Journal of Neuroscience
Journal of Neuroscience 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
9.30
自引率
3.80%
发文量
1164
审稿时长
12 months
期刊介绍: JNeurosci (ISSN 0270-6474) is an official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. It is published weekly by the Society, fifty weeks a year, one volume a year. JNeurosci publishes papers on a broad range of topics of general interest to those working on the nervous system. Authors now have an Open Choice option for their published articles
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