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1.
AMPA receptors mediate the majority of fast synaptic transmission in the central nervous system and are therefore among the most intensively studied ligand-gated ion channels over the last decades. However, the recent discovery that native AMPA receptor complexes contain auxiliary subunits classified as transmembrane AMPA receptor regulatory proteins (TARPs) was quite a surprise and dramatically changed the field of AMPA receptor research. TARPs regulate trafficking as well as synaptic localization of AMPA receptors, and alter their pharmacological and biophysical properties, generally resulting in strongly elevated receptor-mediated currents. Thus, the association of AMPA receptors with TARPs increases receptor heterogeneity and diversity of postsynaptic currents. In this regard, unravelling the mechanisms by which TARPs modulate AMPA receptor function is an intriguing challenge. Studying the functional importance of the carboxy-terminal domain (CTD) of TARPs for receptor modulation, we found that the increased trafficking mediated by the two TARPs γ2 and γ3 is attributable to their CTDs. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the CTD additionally determines the differences between TARPs regarding their modulation of AMPA receptor function. As a case in point, we showed a unique role of the CTD of γ4, suggesting that TARPs modulate AMPA receptor function via individual mechanisms.  相似文献   

2.
We performed a genealogical analysis of the ionotropic glutamate receptor (iGluR) gene family, which includes the animal iGluRs and the newly isolated glutamate receptor-like genes (GLR) of plants discovered in Arabidopsis. Distance measures firmly placed the plant GLR genes within the iGluR clade as opposed to other ion channel clades and indicated that iGluRs may be a primitive signaling mechanism that predated the divergence of animals and plants. Moreover, phylogenetic analyses using both parsimony and neighbor joining indicated that the divergence of animal iGluRs and plant GLR genes predated the divergence of iGluR subtypes (NMDA vs. AMPA/KA) in animals. By estimating the congruence of the various glutamate receptor gene regions, we showed that the different functional domains, including the two ligand-binding domains and the transmembrane regions, have coevolved, suggesting that they assembled together before plants and animals diverged. Based on residue conservation and divergence as well as positions of residues with respect to functional domains of iGluR proteins, we attempted to examine structure-function relationships. This analysis defined M3 as the most highly conserved transmembrane domain and identified potential functionally important conserved residues whose function can be examined in future studies.  相似文献   

3.
α-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionate (AMPA)- type glutamate receptors are essential players in fast synaptic transmission in the vertebrate central nervous system. Their synaptic delivery and localization as well as their electrophysiological properties are regulated by transmembrane AMPA receptor regulatory proteins (TARPs). However, the exact mechanisms of how the four originally designated TARPs (γ2, γ3, γ4, and γ8) modulate AMPA receptor function remain largely unknown. Previous studies suggested the C-terminal domain (CTD) of γ2 to mediate increased trafficking and reduced desensitization of AMPA receptors. As it remained unclear whether these findings extend to other TARPs, we set out to investigate and compare the role of the CTDs of the four original TARPs in AMPA receptor modulation. To address this issue, we replaced the TARP CTDs with the CTD of the homologous subunit γ1, a voltage-dependent calcium channel subunit expressed in skeletal muscle that lacks TARP properties. We analyzed the impact of the resulting chimeras on GluR1 functional properties in Xenopus oocytes and HEK293 cells. Interestingly, the CTDs of all TARPs not only modulate the extent and kinetics of desensitization but also modulate agonist potencies of AMPA receptors. Furthermore, the CTDs are required for TARP-induced modulation of AMPA receptor gating, including conversion of antagonists to partial agonists and constitutive channel openings. Strikingly, we found a special role of the cytoplasmic tail of γ4, suggesting that the underlying mechanisms of modulation of AMPA receptor function are different among the TARPs. We propose that the intracellularly located CTD is the origin of TARP-specific functional modulation and not merely a facilitator of trafficking.  相似文献   

4.
Ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs) are ligand gated ion channels that mediate excitatory synaptic transmission in the brain of vertebrates. A rapidly growing body of crystal structures for isolated iGluR extracellular domains, and more recently a full length AMPA receptor, combined with data from electrophysiological experiments and MD simulations, provides a framework that makes it possible to investigate the molecular basis for assembly, gating and modulation. These unprecedented advances in structural biology are constantly challenged by novel functional properties that emerge despite decades of functional analysis, and by a growing family of auxiliary proteins that modulate iGluR activity and assembly.  相似文献   

5.
Excitatory synaptic transmission in the brain is mediated by ligand-gated ion channels (iGluRs) activated by glutamate. Distinct from other neurotransmitter receptors, the extracellular domains of iGluRs are loosely packed assemblies with two clearly distinct layers, each of which has both local and global 2-fold axes of symmetry. By contrast, the iGluR transmembrane segments have 4-fold symmetry and share a conserved pore loop architecture found in tetrameric voltage-gated ion channels. The striking layered architecture of iGluRs revealed by the 3.6?? resolution structure of an AMPA receptor homotetramer likely arose from gene fusion events that occurred early in evolution. Although this modular design has greatly facilitated biophysical and structural studies on individual iGluR domains, and suggested conserved mechanisms for iGluR gating, recent work is beginning to reveal unanticipated diversity in the structure, allosteric regulation, and assembly of iGluR subtypes.  相似文献   

6.
Fast excitatory synaptic transmission in the CNS is mediated by the neurotransmitter glutamate, binding to and activating AMPA receptors (AMPARs). AMPARs are known to interact with auxiliary proteins that modulate their behavior. One such family of proteins is the transmembrane AMPA receptor‐related proteins, known as TARPs. Little is known about the role of TARPs during development, or about their function in non‐mammalian organisms. Here we report the presence of TARPs, specifically the prototypical TARP, stargazin, in developing zebrafish. We find that zebrafish express two forms of stargazin, Cacng2a and Cacng2b from as early as 12‐h post fertilization (hpf). Knockdown of Cacng2a and Cacng2b via splice‐blocking morpholinos resulted in embryos that exhibited deficits in C‐start escape responses, showing reduced C‐bend angles, smaller tail velocities and aberrant C‐bend turning directions. Injection of the morphants with Cacng2a or 2b mRNA rescued the morphological phenotype and the synaptic deficits. To investigate the effect of reduced Cacng2a and 2b levels on synaptic physiology, we performed whole cell patch clamp recordings of AMPA mEPSCs from zebrafish Mauthner cells. Knockdown of Cacng2a results in reduced AMPA currents and lower mEPSC frequencies, whereas knockdown of Cacng2b displayed no significant change in mEPSC amplitude or frequency. Non‐stationary fluctuation analysis confirmed a reduction in the number of active synaptic receptors in the Cacng2a but not in the Cacng2b morphants. Together, these results suggest that Cacng2a is required for normal trafficking and function of synaptic AMPARs, while Cacng2b is largely non‐functional with respect to the development of AMPA synaptic transmission. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol 76: 487–506, 2016  相似文献   

7.
AP-4 is a member of the adaptor protein complexes, which control vesicular trafficking of membrane proteins. Although AP-4 has been suggested to contribute to basolateral sorting in epithelial cells, its function in neurons is unknown. Here, we show that disruption of the gene encoding the beta subunit of AP-4 resulted in increased accumulation of axonal autophagosomes, which contained AMPA receptors and transmembrane AMPA receptor regulatory proteins (TARPs), in axons of hippocampal neurons and cerebellar Purkinje cells both in vitro and in vivo. AP-4 indirectly associated with the AMPA receptor via TARPs, and the specific disruption of the interaction between AP-4 and TARPs caused the mislocalization of endogenous AMPA receptors in axons of wild-type neurons. These results indicate that AP-4 may regulate proper somatodendritic-specific distribution of its cargo proteins, including AMPA receptor-TARP complexes and the autophagic pathway in neurons.  相似文献   

8.
Kato AS  Siuda ER  Nisenbaum ES  Bredt DS 《Neuron》2008,59(6):986-996
AMPA-type glutamate receptors (GluRs) play major roles in excitatory synaptic transmission. Neuronal AMPA receptors comprise GluR subunits and transmembrane AMPA receptor regulatory proteins (TARPs). Previous studies identified five mammalian TARPs, gamma-2 (or stargazin), gamma-3, gamma-4, gamma-7, and gamma-8, that enhance AMPA receptor function. Here, we classify gamma-5 as a distinct class of TARP that modulates specific GluR2-containing AMPA receptors and displays properties entirely dissimilar from canonical TARPs. Gamma-5 increases peak currents and decreases the steady-state currents selectively from GluR2-containing AMPA receptors. Furthermore, gamma-5 increases rates of GluR2 deactivation and desensitization and decreases glutamate potency. Remarkably, all effects of gamma-5 require editing of GluR2 mRNA. Unlike other TARPs, gamma-5 modulates GluR2 without promoting receptor trafficking. We also find that gamma-7 regulation of GluR2 is dictated by mRNA editing. These data establish gamma-5 and gamma-7 as a separate family of "type II TARPs" that impart distinct physiological features to specific AMPA receptors.  相似文献   

9.
Cho CH  St-Gelais F  Zhang W  Tomita S  Howe JR 《Neuron》2007,55(6):890-904
Transmembrane AMPA receptor regulatory proteins (TARPs) are auxiliary AMPA receptor subunits that regulate both the trafficking and gating properties of AMPA receptors, and different TARP isoforms display distinct expression patterns in brain. Here, we compared the effects of four TARP isoforms on the kinetics of AMPA receptor currents. Each isoform slowed the deactivation of GluR1 currents, but the slowing was greatest with gamma-4 and gamma-8. Isoform-specific differences in desensitization were also observed that correlated with effects on deactivation. TARP isoforms also differentially modulated responses to trains of glutamate applications designed to mimic high-frequency presynaptic firing. Importantly, whereas both stargazin and gamma-4 rescued excitatory synaptic transmission in cerebellar granule cells from stargazer mice, the decay of miniature EPSCs was 2-fold slower in neurons expressing gamma-4. The results show that heterogeneity in the composition of AMPA receptor/TARP complexes contributes to synapse-specific differences in EPSC decays and frequency-dependent modulation of neurotransmission.  相似文献   

10.
Kato AS  Gill MB  Ho MT  Yu H  Tu Y  Siuda ER  Wang H  Qian YW  Nisenbaum ES  Tomita S  Bredt DS 《Neuron》2010,68(6):1082-1096
Transmembrane AMPA receptor regulatory proteins (TARPs) and cornichon proteins (CNIH-2/3) independently modulate AMPA receptor trafficking and gating. However, the potential for interactions of these subunits within an AMPA receptor complex is unknown. Here, we find that TARPs γ-4, γ-7, and γ-8, but not γ-2, γ-3, or γ-5, cause AMPA receptors to "resensitize" upon continued glutamate application. With γ-8, resensitization occurs with all GluA subunit combinations; however, γ-8-containing hippocampal neurons do not display resensitization. In recombinant systems, CNIH-2 abrogates γ-8-mediated resensitization and modifies AMPA receptor pharmacology and gating to match that of hippocampal neurons. In hippocampus, γ-8 and CNIH-2 associate in postsynaptic densities and CNIH-2 protein levels are markedly diminished in γ-8 knockout mice. Manipulating neuronal CNIH-2 levels modulates the electrophysiological properties of extrasynaptic and synaptic γ-8-containing AMPA receptors. Thus, γ-8 and CNIH-2 functionally interact with common hippocampal AMPA receptor complexes to modulate synergistically kinetics and pharmacology.  相似文献   

11.
The neurotransmitter glutamate mediates excitatory synaptic transmission by gating ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs). AMPA receptors (AMPARs), a subtype of iGluR, are strongly implicated in synaptic plasticity, learning, and memory. We previously discovered two classes of AMPAR auxiliary proteins in C.?elegans that modify receptor kinetics and thus change synaptic transmission. Here, we have identified another auxiliary protein, SOL-2, a CUB-domain protein that associates with both the related auxiliary subunit SOL-1 and with the GLR-1 AMPAR. In sol-2 mutants, behaviors dependent on glutamatergic transmission are disrupted, GLR-1-mediated currents are diminished, and GLR-1 desensitization and pharmacology are modified. Remarkably,?a secreted variant of SOL-1 delivered in trans can rescue sol-1 mutants, and this rescue depends on in cis expression of SOL-2. Finally, we demonstrate that SOL-1 and SOL-2 have an ongoing role in the adult nervous system to control AMPAR-mediated currents.  相似文献   

12.
Functional expression of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptors in cerebellar granule cells requires stargazin, a member of a large family of four-pass transmembrane proteins. Here, we define a family of transmembrane AMPA receptor regulatory proteins (TARPs), which comprise stargazin, gamma-3, gamma-4, and gamma-8, but not related proteins, that mediate surface expression of AMPA receptors. TARPs exhibit discrete and complementary patterns of expression in both neurons and glia in the developing and mature central nervous system. In brain regions that express multiple isoforms, such as cerebral cortex, TARP-AMPA receptor complexes are strictly segregated, suggesting distinct roles for TARP isoforms. TARPs interact with AMPA receptors at the postsynaptic density, and surface expression of mature AMPA receptors requires a TARP. These studies indicate a general role for TARPs in controlling synaptic AMPA receptors throughout the central nervous system.  相似文献   

13.
AMPA receptors–mediators of fast, excitatory transmission and synaptic plasticity in the brain–achieve great functional diversity through interaction with different auxiliary subunits, which alter both the trafficking and biophysical properties of these receptors. In the past several years an abundance of new AMPA receptor auxiliary subunits have been identified, adding astounding variety to the proteins known to directly bind and modulate AMPA receptors. SynDIG1 was recently identified as a novel AMPA receptor interacting protein that directly binds to the AMPA receptor subunit GluA2 in heterologous cells. Functionally, SynDIG1 was found to regulate the strength and density of AMPA receptor containing synapses in hippocampal neurons, though the way in which SynDIG1 exerts these effects remains unknown. Here, we aimed to determine if SynDIG1 acts as a traditional auxiliary subunit, directly regulating the function and localization of AMPA receptors in the rat hippocampus. We find that, unlike any of the previously characterized AMPA receptor auxiliary subunits, SynDIG1 expression does not impact AMPA receptor gating, pharmacology, or surface trafficking. Rather, we show that SynDIG1 regulates the number of functional excitatory synapses, altering both AMPA and NMDA receptor mediated transmission. Our findings suggest that SynDIG1 is not a typical auxiliary subunit to AMPA receptors, but instead is a protein critical to excitatory synaptogenesis.  相似文献   

14.
Previous studies showed that a variety of bone cells express protein components necessary for neuronal-like glutamatergic signaling and implicated glutamate as having a role in mechanically induced bone remodeling. Initial functional studies concentrated on the role of glutamate signaling in bone resorption and provided compelling evidence to suggest that glutamate signaling through functional NMDA type ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs) is a prerequisite for in vitro osteoclastogenesis. Originally, effects of iGluR antagonists seen in co-cultures were attributed to antagonists acting directly on osteoclast precursors. However, in the light of recent osteoblast studies it now seems likely that the observed effects on osteoclastogenesis are an indirect effect of modulating the function of pre-osteoblast present within these cultures. The presence of iGluRs in osteoblasts suggests a role for them in bone formation and this paper reviews and discusses the emerging data relating to the role of glutamate signaling in osteoblasts. A number of recently published studies have shown that osteoblasts not only express a wide number of 'pre-synaptic' glutamatergic proteins but also possess the ability to both regulate glutamate release and actively recycle extracellular glutamate. The functionality of osteoblastic 'post-synaptic' glutamatergic components has also been shown as both primary and clonal osteoblasts express electrophysiologically active iGluRs, metabotropic type glutamate receptors (mGluRs) along with a variety of glutamate receptor associated signaling proteins. There is, however, little published data regarding the actual role of glutamatergic signaling in osteoblastic bone formation. In vivo and in vitro studies performed provide evidence that glutamatergic signaling is a necessity for normal osteoblast function. In a number of different models of in vitro bone formation, the addition of non-competitive antagonists of iGluRs prevents the formation of mineralized bone, moreover antagonizing some sub-types of iGluR mediates the differentiation of pre-osteoblasts. iGluR antagonists modulate osteoblast function in a manner that correlates with the previously reported data regarding in vitro osteoclastogenesis. Interestingly iGluR mediated glutamate signaling appears to function differently in osteoblasts derived from flat and long bones. This implies the components of osteoblastic glutamatergic signaling may be adapted in vivo possibly to reflect the differential function of osteoblasts in those regions of the skeleton.  相似文献   

15.
Neurotransmission in the brain is critically dependent on excitatory synaptic signaling mediated by AMPA-class ionotropic glutamate receptors (AMPARs). AMPARs are known to be associated with Transmembrane AMPA receptor Regulatory Proteins (TARPs). In vertebrates, at least four TARPs appear to have redundant roles as obligate chaperones for AMPARs, thus greatly complicating analysis of TARP participation in synaptic function. We have overcome this limitation by identifying and mutating the essential set of TARPs in C. elegans (STG-1 and STG-2). In TARP mutants, AMPAR-mediated currents and worm behaviors are selectively disrupted despite apparently normal surface expression and clustering of the receptors. Reconstitution experiments indicate that both STG-1 and STG-2 can functionally substitute for vertebrate TARPs to modify receptor function. Thus, we show that TARPs are obligate auxiliary subunits for AMPARs with a primary, evolutionarily conserved functional role in the modification of current kinetics.  相似文献   

16.
Ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs) mediate excitatory neurotransmission in the central nervous system and play key roles in brain development and disease. iGluRs have two distinct extracellular domains, but the functional role of the distal N-terminal domain (NTD) is poorly understood. Crystal structures of the NTD from some non-N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) iGluRs are consistent with a rigid body that facilitates receptor assembly but suggest an additional dynamic role that could modulate signaling. Here, we moved beyond spatial and temporal limitations of conventional protein single-molecule spectroscopy by employing correlation analysis of extrinsic oxazine fluorescence fluctuations. We observed nanosecond (ns)-to-microsecond (μs) motions of loop segments and helices within a region of an AMPA-type iGluR NTD, which has been identified previously to be structurally variable. Our data reveal that the AMPA receptor NTD undergoes rapid conformational fluctuations, suggesting an inherent allosteric capacity for this domain in addition to its established assembly function.  相似文献   

17.
Matsuda S  Yuzaki M 《Autophagy》2008,4(6):815-816
Neurons are highly polarized cells composed of two distinct domains, the axon and the somatodendritic domain. Although AMPA-type glutamate receptors, which mediate fast excitatory neurotransmission in the vertebrate CNS, are preferentially expressed in the somatodendritic domain, the molecular mechanisms underlying such polarized distribution have remained elusive. We recently demonstrated that adaptor protein complex-4 (AP-4) binds to transmembrane AMPA receptor regulatory proteins (TARPs), thereby mediating the selective trafficking of AMPA receptors to the somatodendritic domain; genetic disruption of AP-4 (AP-4beta(-/-)), results in the mislocalization of TARPs and AMPA receptors in the axons. Similarly, low-density lipoprotein receptors and delta2 glutamate receptors are mislocalized in axons, while other cargos, such as NMDA receptors and metabotropic glutamate receptors, are properly excluded from AP-4beta(-/-) axons. These findings indicate that there exist AP-4-dependent and -independent sorting mechanisms. Unexpectedly, mislocalized AMPA receptors do not reach the cell surface and accumulate in autophagosomes in the bulging portions of AP-4beta(-/-) axons. Several lines of evidence indicate that mislocalized AMPA receptors activate the autophagic pathway. Since increased autophagy and axonal swelling are suggested to occur in various neuronal disorders, further studies using AP-4beta(-/-) mice are warranted to understand the mechanisms regulating autophagy in axons.  相似文献   

18.
In newborn pigs, vasodilation of pial arterioles in response to glutamate is mediated via carbon monoxide (CO), a gaseous messenger endogenously produced from heme degradation by a heme oxygenase (HO)-catalyzed reaction. We addressed the hypothesis that ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs), including N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA)- and 2-amino-3-(5-methyl-3-oxo-1,2-oxazol-4-yl) propanoic acid (AMPA)/kainate-type receptors, expressed in cortical astrocytes mediate glutamate-induced astrocyte HO activation that leads to cerebral vasodilation. Acute vasoactive effects of topical iGluR agonists were determined by intravital microscopy using closed cranial windows in anesthetized newborn pigs. iGluR agonists, including NMDA, (±)1-aminocyclopentane-cis-1,3-dicarboxylic acid (cis-ACPD), AMPA, and kainate, produced pial arteriolar dilation. Topical L-2-aminoadipic acid, a gliotoxin that selectively disrupts glia limitans, reduced vasodilation caused by iGluR agonists, but not by hypercapnia, bradykinin, or sodium nitroprusside. In freshly isolated and cultured cortical astrocytes constitutively expressing HO-2, iGluR agonists NMDA, cis-ACPD, AMPA, and kainate rapidly increased CO production two- to threefold. Astrocytes overexpressing inducible HO-1 had high baseline CO but were less sensitive to glutamate stimulation of CO production when compared with HO-2-expressing astrocytes. Glutamate-induced astrocyte HO-2-mediated CO production was inhibited by either the NMDA receptor antagonist (R)-3C4HPG or the AMPA/kainate receptor antagonist DNQX. Accordingly, either antagonist abolished pial arteriolar dilation in response to glutamate, NMDA, and AMPA, indicating functional interaction among various subtypes of astrocytic iGluRs in response to glutamate stimulation. Overall, these data indicate that the astrocyte component of the neurovascular unit is responsible for the vasodilation response of pial arterioles to topically applied glutamate via iGluRs that are functionally linked to activation of constitutive HO in newborn piglets.  相似文献   

19.
AMPA receptors (AMPAR) mediate the majority of fast excitatory neurotransmission in the central nervous system (CNS). Transmembrane AMPAR regulatory proteins (TARPs) have been identified as a novel family of proteins which act as auxiliary subunits of AMPARs to modulate AMPAR trafficking and function. The trafficking of AMPARs to regulate the number of receptors at the synapse plays a key role in various forms of synaptic plasticity, including long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD). Expression of the prototypical TARP, stargazin/TARPgamma2, is ablated in the stargazer mutant mouse, an animal model of absence epilepsy and cerebellar ataxia. Studies on the stargazer mutant mouse have revealed that failure to express TARPgamma2 has widespread effects on the balance of expression of both excitatory (AMPAR) and inhibitory receptors (GABA(A) receptors, GABAR). The understanding of TARP function has implications for the future development of AMPAR potentiators, which have been shown to have therapeutic potential in both psychological and neurological disorders such as schizophrenia, depression and Parkinson's disease.  相似文献   

20.
Alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid (AMPA)-type glutamate receptors mediate the majority of excitatory signaling in the CNS, and the functional properties and subcellular fate of these receptors depend on receptor subunit composition. Subunit assembly is thought to occur in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), although we are just beginning to understand the underlying mechanism. Here we examine the trafficking of Caenorhabditis elegans glutamate receptors through the ER. Our data indicate that neurons require signaling by the unfolded protein response (UPR) to move GLR-1, GLR-2, and GLR-5 subunits out of the ER and through the secretory pathway. In contrast, other neuronal transmembrane proteins do not require UPR signaling for ER exit. The requirement for the UPR pathway is cell type and age dependent: impairment for receptor trafficking increases as animals age and does not occur in all neurons. Expression of XBP-1, a component of the UPR pathway, is elevated in neurons during development. Our results suggest that UPR signaling is a critical step in neural function that is needed for glutamate receptor assembly and secretion.  相似文献   

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