Qual Journals: Difference between revisions

From bradwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
 
(14 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 2: Line 2:




==Tardin, Choquet et al. (2003)==
==Tardin • Cognet • Bats • Lounis • Choquet 2003 • The EMBO Journal==
{{SlideBox|Direct imaging of lateral movements of AMPA receptors inside synapses|
{{SlideBox|Direct imaging of lateral movements of AMPA receptors inside synapses|


Line 44: Line 44:
*Final: 160 AMPARs
*Final: 160 AMPARs
---------------
---------------
}}


==Rao-Ruiz Spijker==
}}<!-- END ARTICLE -->
 
==Rao-Ruiz Spijker • 2011 • Nature Neuroscience==
{{SlideBox|Retrieval-specific endocytosis of GluA2-AMPARs underlies adaptive reconsolidation of contextual fear|
{{SlideBox|Retrieval-specific endocytosis of GluA2-AMPARs underlies adaptive reconsolidation of contextual fear|
[[File:3y-2.png|thumb|400px]]
[[File:3y-2.png|thumb|400px]]
Line 83: Line 84:
*GluR3 50% 50% 100%
*GluR3 50% 50% 100%
---------------
---------------
}}




==Bassani · Folci · Zapata · Passafaro 2013==
}}<!-- END ARTICLE -->
{{SlideBox|AMPAR trafficking in synapse maturation and plasticity|
 
 
 
==Bassani · Folci · Zapata · Passafaro 2013 • Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences==
{{SlideBox|[[AMPAR]] trafficking in synapse maturation and plasticity|


===Abstract===
===Abstract===
Line 109: Line 113:
[[File:AMPAR NMDAR.png]]
[[File:AMPAR NMDAR.png]]
{{Clear}}
{{Clear}}
[[AMPAR]] trafficking and synaptic targeting relies on interactions with several types of proteins, comprising those that interact with the extracellular N-terminal domain; those that interact with the intracellular C-terminal domain (including proteins with PDZ domains), and the so-called [[AMPAR]] auxiliary proteins.  
[[AMPAR]] trafficking and synaptic targeting relies on interactions with several types of proteins, comprising those that interact with the extracellular N-terminal domain; those that interact with the intracellular C-terminal domain (including proteins with [[PDZ]] domains), and the so-called [[AMPAR]] auxiliary proteins.  


;Proteins interacting with the extracellular domain  
;Proteins interacting with the extracellular domain  
Line 117: Line 121:
;Proteins interacting with the intracellular domain
;Proteins interacting with the intracellular domain


;*PDZ domain proteins interacting with the C-terminal domain
;*[[PDZ]] domain proteins interacting with the C-terminal domain


The C-terminus of GluA1 binds with a PDZ domain of SAP97—a member of the membrane-associated guanylate kinase (MAGUK) family [35 ]. SAP97 interacts with the [[Protein Kinase A|protein kinase A]] ([[PKA]]) anchoring molecule AKAP79 [36 ], which may serve to enhance the GluA1 phosphorylation required for [[LTP]] [37 ]. Recently, it has been shown that neuronal activity induces AKAP79/150 palmitoylation, which is required for AKAP79/150 recruitment at spines and for spine enlargement [38 , 39 ]. In AKAP79/150-KO mice, [[PKA]] does not reach the postsynaptic membrane and the bidirectional modulation of postsynaptic AMPARs is altered, with concomitant alterations in synaptic transmission and memory [40 ]. However, SAP97 has also been shown to act early in the secretory pathway to facilitate [[AMPAR]] maturation [41 ]. Furthermore, while some studies have found that SAP97 overexpression in cultured neurons increased the number of synaptic AMPARs and NMDARs [42 , 43 ], other studies report that SAP97 has no significant effect on excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) mediated by [[AMPAR]] or NMDAR [44 , 45 ]. The situation is further complicated by the recent finding that SAP97 conditional KO mice have normal [[LTP]] [46 ]. Clearly, further research is required to elucidate the roles of SAP97 in [[AMPAR]] trafficking. GluA2 and GluA3 share a C-terminal sequence (-SVKI) that interacts with glutamate receptor-interacting proteins (GRIP1/2) containing seven PDZ domains [47 ]; with [[AMPAR]] binding protein (ABP) [48 , 49 ], which has six PDZ domains; and with PICK1, which contains a single PDZ domain. ABP seems to be a splice variant of GRIP2 (also called GRIPrelated protein), which lacks the GRIP2 N-terminus and PDZ7 [48 ]. ABP and GRIP are found at the PSD and also in intracellular punctate structures resembling endosomes. Several studies have implicated GRIP1/2 in the control of [[AMPAR]] trafficking, as well as synaptic plasticity and social behavior. For example, genetic ablation of GRIP1/2 abolishes cerebellar LTD [50 ] and affected mice show increased sociability and impaired prepulse inhibition [51 ]. However, it is unclear how GRIP1/2 achieves this control. Some studies suggest that [[AMPAR]] delivery to dendrites and synapses requires GRIP1 interaction with kinesin heavy chain [52 ] and liprin-α , which in turn binds microtubule-based motor KIF1A [53 , 54 ] and also the LAR family of tyrosine phosphatase receptors [55 ]. Liprin-α  has been shown to be important for both postsynaptic and presynaptic maturation [53 ]. Other studies indicate that GRIP1 retains AMPARs in the intracellular compartment [56 ]. Others again indicate that GRIP1 regulates the endosomal recycling of AMPARs in that GRIP1 binding to neuronenriched endosomal protein 21 kDa (NEEP21) promotes the recycling of internalized AMPARs back to the plasma membrane [57 , 58 ]. It has also been reported that GRIP1 binds KIF5, another microtubule-based motor protein important for vesicular transport along axons and dendrites: the KIF5–GRIP1 complex interacts with GluA2, and appears to be involved in the transport of GluA2 to dendrites [52 ]. The interaction of GluA2 with PICK1 is important for GluA2 endocytosis [59 ]. Furthermore, the interactions of GRIP/ABP and PICK1 with GluA2 depend on the phosphorylation status of serine 880 (S880) and tyrosine 876 (Y876) on the C-terminal of the GluA2 subunit: In particular, phosphorylation of S880 prevents the interaction of GRIP/ABP with GluA2, but not of PICK1 with GluA2 [60 , 61 ]. On the other hand, ABP binding can itself prevent S880 phosphorylation [62 ]. Phosphorylation of Y876 by Src tyrosine kinase also regulates the GRIP/ABP interaction with GluA2, but not the PICK1 interaction [63 ]. GRIP, ABP/GRIP2, and PICK also play critical roles in LTD and are involved in regulating the recycling of internalized following NMDAR activation [64 ], in association with the memory performance-associated protein KIBRA, which also binds PICK1 and [[AMPAR]] [65 ]. Recently, PICK1 has been shown to interact with tetraspannin- 7 (Tspan7), a protein involved in X-linked intellectual disability, and this interaction has been shown to be important for the localization of AMPARs at the postsynaptic membrane, and for synapse maturation [66 ].
The C-terminus of GluA1 binds with a [[PDZ]] domain of SAP97—a member of the membrane-associated guanylate kinase (MAGUK) family [35 ]. SAP97 interacts with the [[Protein Kinase A|protein kinase A]] ([[PKA]]) anchoring molecule AKAP79 [36 ], which may serve to enhance the GluA1 phosphorylation required for [[LTP]] [37 ]. Recently, it has been shown that neuronal activity induces AKAP79/150 palmitoylation, which is required for AKAP79/150 recruitment at spines and for spine enlargement [38 , 39 ]. In AKAP79/150-KO mice, [[PKA]] does not reach the postsynaptic membrane and the bidirectional modulation of postsynaptic AMPARs is altered, with concomitant alterations in synaptic transmission and memory [40 ]. However, SAP97 has also been shown to act early in the secretory pathway to facilitate [[AMPAR]] maturation [41 ]. Furthermore, while some studies have found that SAP97 overexpression in cultured neurons increased the number of synaptic AMPARs and NMDARs [42 , 43 ], other studies report that SAP97 has no significant effect on excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) mediated by [[AMPAR]] or NMDAR [44 , 45 ]. The situation is further complicated by the recent finding that SAP97 conditional KO mice have normal [[LTP]] [46 ]. Clearly, further research is required to elucidate the roles of SAP97 in [[AMPAR]] trafficking. GluA2 and GluA3 share a C-terminal sequence (-SVKI) that interacts with glutamate receptor-interacting proteins (GRIP1/2) containing seven [[PDZ]] domains [47 ]; with [[AMPAR]] binding protein (ABP) [48 , 49 ], which has six [[PDZ]] domains; and with PICK1, which contains a single [[PDZ]] domain. ABP seems to be a splice variant of GRIP2 (also called GRIPrelated protein), which lacks the GRIP2 N-terminus and PDZ7 [48 ]. ABP and GRIP are found at the PSD and also in intracellular punctate structures resembling endosomes. Several studies have implicated GRIP1/2 in the control of [[AMPAR]] trafficking, as well as synaptic plasticity and social behavior. For example, genetic ablation of GRIP1/2 abolishes cerebellar LTD [50 ] and affected mice show increased sociability and impaired prepulse inhibition [51 ]. However, it is unclear how GRIP1/2 achieves this control. Some studies suggest that [[AMPAR]] delivery to dendrites and synapses requires GRIP1 interaction with kinesin heavy chain [52 ] and liprin-α , which in turn binds microtubule-based motor KIF1A [53 , 54 ] and also the LAR family of tyrosine phosphatase receptors [55 ]. Liprin-α  has been shown to be important for both postsynaptic and presynaptic maturation [53 ]. Other studies indicate that GRIP1 retains AMPARs in the intracellular compartment [56 ]. Others again indicate that GRIP1 regulates the endosomal recycling of AMPARs in that GRIP1 binding to neuronenriched endosomal protein 21 kDa (NEEP21) promotes the recycling of internalized AMPARs back to the plasma membrane [57 , 58 ]. It has also been reported that GRIP1 binds KIF5, another microtubule-based motor protein important for vesicular transport along axons and dendrites: the KIF5–GRIP1 complex interacts with GluA2, and appears to be involved in the transport of GluA2 to dendrites [52 ]. The interaction of GluA2 with PICK1 is important for GluA2 endocytosis [59 ]. Furthermore, the interactions of GRIP/ABP and PICK1 with GluA2 depend on the phosphorylation status of serine 880 (S880) and tyrosine 876 (Y876) on the C-terminal of the GluA2 subunit: In particular, phosphorylation of S880 prevents the interaction of GRIP/ABP with GluA2, but not of PICK1 with GluA2 [60 , 61 ]. On the other hand, ABP binding can itself prevent S880 phosphorylation [62 ]. Phosphorylation of Y876 by Src tyrosine kinase also regulates the GRIP/ABP interaction with GluA2, but not the PICK1 interaction [63 ]. GRIP, ABP/GRIP2, and PICK also play critical roles in LTD and are involved in regulating the recycling of internalized following NMDAR activation [64 ], in association with the memory performance-associated protein KIBRA, which also binds PICK1 and [[AMPAR]] [65 ]. Recently, PICK1 has been shown to interact with tetraspannin- 7 (Tspan7), a protein involved in X-linked intellectual disability, and this interaction has been shown to be important for the localization of AMPARs at the postsynaptic membrane, and for synapse maturation [66 ].


;*Interactions of with 4.1N, NSF, and AP2 with the C-terminal domain
;*Interactions of with 4.1N, NSF, and AP2 with the C-terminal domain
Line 127: Line 131:
;*AMPA auxiliary proteins
;*AMPA auxiliary proteins


The AMPA auxiliary proteins are another group of molecules important for [[AMPAR]] targeting to the postsynaptic membrane. They include the transmembrane [[AMPAR]] regulatory proteins (TARPs), cornichon-like proteins, neuropilin, and tolloid-like proteins [79 , 80 , 81 , 82 , 83 , 84 ]. TARPs regulate [[AMPAR]] trafficking and channel kinetics and are classified into six isoforms—type 1a (γ -2/stargazin and γ -3), type 1b (γ -4 and γ -8), and type 2 (γ -5 and γ -7)— according to how they control [[AMPAR]] trafficking and channel properties [85 , 86 ]. They stabilize AMPARs at the postsynaptic membrane by direct interaction with scaffolding protein PSD95 and other MAGUKs. TARPs also slow deactivation and desensitization, thereby increasing [[AMPAR]] conductance, and influencing [[AMPAR]] affinity for pharmacological agents [85 , 87 , 88 , 89 , 90 ]. Synaptic TARP phosphorylation is activity regulated and in turn phosphorylation influences stargazin binding to PSD-95 [91 , 92 , 93 ]. CaMKIIdependent phosphorylation of stargazin retains AMPARs at postsynaptic sites by reducing [[AMPAR]] diffusion [94 ]. Interaction of AMPARs with the cornichon-like proteins CNIH2 and CNIH3 was recently reported by Schwenk et al. [95 ], who showed that this interaction is involved in the regulation of [[AMPAR]] expression in the postsynaptic membrane, and also influences [[AMPAR]] channel properties. CNIH2 and CNIH3 bind AMPARs which in turn complex with TARPγ 4 in the [[hippocampus]] [96 ]. In this complex, the cornichon-like proteins control [[AMPAR]] trafficking to the postsynaptic membrane, whereas TARPγ 4 stabilizes the CNIH2/3–[[AMPAR]] interaction in the membrane [97 ].
The AMPA auxiliary proteins are another group of molecules important for [[AMPAR]] targeting to the postsynaptic membrane. They include the transmembrane [[AMPAR]] regulatory proteins (TARPs), cornichon-like proteins, neuropilin, and tolloid-like proteins [79 , 80 , 81 , 82 , 83 , 84 ]. TARPs regulate [[AMPAR]] trafficking and channel kinetics and are classified into six isoforms—type 1a (γ -2/stargazin and γ -3), type 1b (γ -4 and γ -8), and type 2 (γ -5 and γ -7)— according to how they control [[AMPAR]] trafficking and channel properties [85 , 86 ]. They stabilize AMPARs at the postsynaptic membrane by direct interaction with scaffolding protein [[PSD95]] and other MAGUKs. TARPs also slow deactivation and desensitization, thereby increasing [[AMPAR]] conductance, and influencing [[AMPAR]] affinity for pharmacological agents [85 , 87 , 88 , 89 , 90 ]. Synaptic TARP phosphorylation is activity regulated and in turn phosphorylation influences stargazin binding to [[PSD-95]] [91 , 92 , 93 ]. CaMKIIdependent phosphorylation of stargazin retains AMPARs at postsynaptic sites by reducing [[AMPAR]] diffusion [94 ]. Interaction of AMPARs with the cornichon-like proteins CNIH2 and CNIH3 was recently reported by Schwenk et al. [95 ], who showed that this interaction is involved in the regulation of [[AMPAR]] expression in the postsynaptic membrane, and also influences [[AMPAR]] channel properties. CNIH2 and CNIH3 bind AMPARs which in turn complex with TARPγ 4 in the [[hippocampus]] [96 ]. In this complex, the cornichon-like proteins control [[AMPAR]] trafficking to the postsynaptic membrane, whereas TARPγ 4 stabilizes the CNIH2/3–[[AMPAR]] interaction in the membrane [97 ].


===AMPAR trafficking at nascent versus mature synapses===
===AMPAR trafficking at nascent versus mature synapses===


As noted above, the subunit composition, channel properties, and membrane protein interactions of glutamate receptors change during the transition from the nascent to the mature synapse [98 , 99 ]. Some of these changes are summarized in Fig. 2 . It was unclear for some time whether newborn synapses express AMPARs, and whether [[AMPAR]] recruitment occurs at the same time as NMDAR recruitment, or comes later. However, evidence now indicates that AMPARs are present at the very beginning of synapse formation. In particular, it has been shown that surface AMPARs are expressed by neuronal progenitors and are also functional [100 , 101 , 102 , 103 ]. It has also been shown in rodents that in the first postnatal week, spontaneous activity induces the delivery of GluA4-containing AMPARs to the postsynaptic membranes  of hippocampal neurons, and that these AMPARs mediate fast excitatory transmission there [104 ]. In mature synapses, GluA4-containing AMPARs are substituted by those containing GluA2, enabling long-term maintenance of synaptic strength [104 ]. These recent findings are consistent with the model proposed by Groc et al. [105 ], which posits that AMPARs are present in the nascent synapse both in a labile state, which is highly sensitive to synaptic activity, and also in a silent state, insensitive to such activity. Not only does [[AMPAR]] subunit composition vary during synapse maturation but the mechanism by which AMPARs are recruited to the synapse also changes. Thus, AMPARs are delivered to mature postsynaptic membranes by a mechanism requiring NMDAR activation; while at nascent synapses, AMPARs are recruited independently of NMDAR signaling [105 ]. Furthermore, in mature synapses, NMDAR activation inhibits [[AMPAR]] signaling by regulating both subunit composition and membrane stabilization (reviewed in [3 , 106 ]). NMDAR composition also changes during development. NMDARs are formed by the association of GluN1 and GluN2 subunits (GluN2A–D), and in nascent synapses, GluN1 and GluN2B are mainly present. During maturation, there is a switch from GluN2B to GluN2A subunits [107 ], which is fundamental for determining mature NMDAR kinetics and signaling pathways. GluN2B-containing NMDARs down-regulate AMPARs at synapses via negative regulation of TARP expression, as shown  by studies in which GluN2B was genetically ablated [3 ]. In nascent synapses, NMDAR activation also inhibits the transcription and translation of [[AMPAR]] GluA1 and GluA2 subunits and promotes the degradation of the [[AMPAR]]-binding partners GRIP1 and PSD95, thereby preventing [[AMPAR]] stabilization in the synapse (reviewed in [106 ]). This mechanism probably accounts for the low [[AMPAR]]/NMDAR ratio in nascent synapses, although this ratio increases progressively during synapse maturation. In fact, a key aspect of synapse maturation is the change in the relative contribution of AMPARs and NMDARs to synaptic currents [108 ]. Other proteins that are involved in the transition from immature to mature synapses include postsynaptic scaffolding proteins, particularly MAGUKs, SAP102, and PSD95 [109 , 110 , 111 ]. Whereas SAP102 regulates AMPA and NMDA receptor trafficking during synaptogenesis, [[PSD95]] plays a central role in their trafficking at mature synapses [43 , 44 , 45 , 112 ]. During synapse maturation, PSD95 regulates the developmental switch between GluN2B and GluN2A NMDAR subunits and promotes the increase in [[AMPAR]] transmission [113 ].
As noted above, the subunit composition, channel properties, and membrane protein interactions of glutamate receptors change during the transition from the nascent to the mature synapse [98 , 99 ]. Some of these changes are summarized in Fig. 2 . It was unclear for some time whether newborn synapses express AMPARs, and whether [[AMPAR]] recruitment occurs at the same time as NMDAR recruitment, or comes later. However, evidence now indicates that AMPARs are present at the very beginning of synapse formation. In particular, it has been shown that surface AMPARs are expressed by neuronal progenitors and are also functional [100 , 101 , 102 , 103 ]. It has also been shown in rodents that in the first postnatal week, spontaneous activity induces the delivery of GluA4-containing AMPARs to the postsynaptic membranes  of hippocampal neurons, and that these AMPARs mediate fast excitatory transmission there [104 ]. In mature synapses, GluA4-containing AMPARs are substituted by those containing GluA2, enabling long-term maintenance of synaptic strength [104 ]. These recent findings are consistent with the model proposed by Groc et al. [105 ], which posits that AMPARs are present in the nascent synapse both in a labile state, which is highly sensitive to synaptic activity, and also in a silent state, insensitive to such activity. Not only does [[AMPAR]] subunit composition vary during synapse maturation but the mechanism by which AMPARs are recruited to the synapse also changes. Thus, AMPARs are delivered to mature postsynaptic membranes by a mechanism requiring NMDAR activation; while at nascent synapses, AMPARs are recruited independently of NMDAR signaling [105 ]. Furthermore, in mature synapses, NMDAR activation inhibits [[AMPAR]] signaling by regulating both subunit composition and membrane stabilization (reviewed in [3 , 106 ]). NMDAR composition also changes during development. NMDARs are formed by the association of GluN1 and GluN2 subunits (GluN2A–D), and in nascent synapses, GluN1 and GluN2B are mainly present. During maturation, there is a switch from GluN2B to GluN2A subunits [107 ], which is fundamental for determining mature NMDAR kinetics and signaling pathways. GluN2B-containing NMDARs down-regulate AMPARs at synapses via negative regulation of TARP expression, as shown  by studies in which GluN2B was genetically ablated [3 ]. In nascent synapses, NMDAR activation also inhibits the transcription and translation of [[AMPAR]] GluA1 and GluA2 subunits and promotes the degradation of the [[AMPAR]]-binding partners GRIP1 and [[PSD95]], thereby preventing [[AMPAR]] stabilization in the synapse (reviewed in [106 ]). This mechanism probably accounts for the low [[AMPAR]]/NMDAR ratio in nascent synapses, although this ratio increases progressively during synapse maturation. In fact, a key aspect of synapse maturation is the change in the relative contribution of AMPARs and NMDARs to synaptic currents [108 ]. Other proteins that are involved in the transition from immature to mature synapses include postsynaptic scaffolding proteins, particularly MAGUKs, SAP102, and [[PSD95]] [109 , 110 , 111 ]. Whereas SAP102 regulates AMPA and NMDA receptor trafficking during synaptogenesis, [[PSD95]] plays a central role in their trafficking at mature synapses [43 , 44 , 45 , 112 ]. During synapse maturation, [[PSD95]] regulates the developmental switch between GluN2B and GluN2A NMDAR subunits and promotes the increase in [[AMPAR]] transmission [113 ].


===AMPAR trafficking in Hebbian plasticity===
===AMPAR trafficking in Hebbian plasticity===
Line 140: Line 144:
;*[[AMPAR]] trafficking in [[LTP]]  
;*[[AMPAR]] trafficking in [[LTP]]  


[[LTP]] is characterized by long-lasting potentiation of [[AMPAR]]-mediated EPSCs [121 ]. Current increase is mediated by post-translational modifications to AMPARs in the early phase of [[LTP]], and by the production of new AMPARs in the late phase [121 , 122 , 123 ]. In the initial phase of [[LTP]], GluA1-containing AMPARs are recruited to the synapse [76 , 124 , 125 ] (Fig. 3 ). According to the widely accepted model, GluA1–GluA2 receptors are excluded from synapses unless an [[LTP]] stimulus is provided, whereas GluA2–GluA3 receptors traffic to the synapse constitutively. This difference in trafficking behavior is thought to be mediated by the C-tails of individual subunit proteins [126 ]. Evidence in favor of this model is that [[LTP]] is impaired in GluA1-KO mice [127 ] and that [[LTP]] is normal in GluA2–GluA3 double KO mice [126 ]. Furthermore, impairment depends on age, so that GluA1- KO mice show [[LTP]] when young, but by postnatal day 42, [[LTP]] has declined to very low levels [128 ]. The occurrence of [[LTP]] in young GluA1-KO animals indicates that a GluA1- independent form of [[LTP]] can occur when GluA1-containing AMPARs are not available [128 ]. This is further supported by the recent finding that [[LTP]] can occur “normally” in neurons in which the genes for GluA1, GluA2, and GluA3 have been deleted [129 ]. Conflicting results have been obtained regarding the role of GluA1 C-terminal tail interactions with PDZdomain proteins in [[LTP]]. When the GluA1 C-terminus fragment was overexpressed [76 ] or the PDZ-binding motif of GluA1 mutated [130 ], GluA1 delivery to the synapse was impaired and [[LTP]] prevented in CA1 pyramidal neurons in slice culture [76 , 130 ]. However, an in vivo study in knockin mice with truncated GluA1 found that [[LTP]] was induced in the absence of the GluA1 PDZ ligand motif [131 ]. These discrepant findings would appear to be model-dependent. The role of the GluA1 subunit in [[LTP]] was further investigated by Selcher et al. [132 ] using a mouse strain lacking this subunit. Their data indicated that GluA1 was specifically recruited in [[LTP]] at both active (having both AMPARand NMDAR-mediated synaptic transmission) and silent synapses (lacking [[AMPAR]]-mediated transmission) [132 ]. By contrast, GluA1 loss did not impair LTD [132 ]. The situation is further complicated by the recent finding of Granger et al. [129 ] that the cytoplasmic tail of GluA1 is not required for [[AMPAR]] trafficking or, therefore [[LTP]]. In their experimental model—which deleted genes for GluA1, GluA2, and GluA3 and re-inserted them one at a time, often with C-tail mutations—they found that AMPARs made of any single subunit could efficiently mediate [[LTP]], and that even kainate could do so. The only prerequisite for [[LTP]] in their system seemed to be the presence of a large reserve pool of glutamate receptors that could move to synapses. Of course their system may be too artificial: KO of the two or three principal [[AMPAR]] subunits may fundamentally alter the expression of the proteins that normally orchestrate [[AMPAR]] trafficking. Nevertheless, Granger and colleagues’ data do show that synapses can display remarkable adaptability, and should stimulate further studies to elucidate how [[AMPAR]]-mediated [[LTP]] is controlled. During the initiation of [[LTP]], NMDARs are activated to enable the calcium influx [133 ] that is critical for the activation of kinases—notably [[CaMKII]], PKC and [[PKA]]—that catalyze the phosphorylation of GluA1 [114 , 134 ], 135 , 136 , 137 ]. In turn, the phosphorylation state of the GluA1 subunit influences [[AMPAR]] insertion into the postsynaptic membrane. Four serine residues (Ser831, Ser845, Ser818, and Ser816) and one threonine residue (Thr840) on the GluA1 subunit can be phosphorylated [135 , 136 , 138 , 139 ]. Initially, only Ser831 (phosphorylated by [[CaMKII]] and PKC) and Ser845 (phosphorylated by [[PKA]]) were thought to be involved in [[LTP]] since phosphorylation at these sites is associated with [[AMPAR]] insertion at the postsynaptic membrane [140 , 141 ]. However, recent work has shown that Ser818 and Ser816 are also phosphorylated by PKC and that this phosphorylation also contributes to [[AMPAR]] insertion at the postsynaptic membrane during [[LTP]] [138 ]. Phosphorylation of these residues enhances the binding of GluA1 with protein 4.1N; by contrast the palmitoylation on cys-811 negatively regulates this interaction [142 ]. It was known that GluA1-4.1N binding regulates GluA1 surface expression [67 ], however, Lin et al. [142 ] reported that 4.1N is required for activity-dependent GluA1 insertion to extrasynaptic surface pools [142 ]. Extrasynaptic pools of AMPARs probably serve as a source of AMPARs for delivery to synapses during [[LTP]], and replenishing these extrasynaptic [[AMPAR]] pools seems important for [[LTP]] maintenance. In fact, acute knockdown of 4.1N impairs [[LTP]] maintenance without affecting the initial phase of [[LTP]] [142 ]. Conversely, phosphorylation of Thr840 is associated with [[AMPAR]] removal and LTD [135 , 143 ]. Recently, another protein kinase, the atypical PKC isoform M zeta (PKMξ ), has been shown to be involved in [[LTP]] [144 ]. PKMξ  increases AMPARs levels at the postsynaptic membrane via up-regulation of [[AMPAR]] trafficking that is dependent on the presence of GluA2 and also the N -ethylmaleimide- sensitive factor (NFS) [145 ]. Inhibition of PKMξ  prevents the maintenance of [[LTP]] but has no effect on its induction [144 , 146 ]. Findings on the role of calcium permeable (CP-) AMPARs (lacking GluA2) in [[LTP]] are conflicting [147 , 148 , 149 , 150 , 151 ]. Plant et al. [147 ] reported that [[LTP]] in CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons causes rapid and transient incorporation of GluA2-lacking receptors, which are subsequently replaced by GluA2-containing AMPARs. In agreement with these findings, Guire et al. [151 ] reported that the synaptic incorporation of CP-AMPARs is regulated by CaM-Kinase I; furthermore, this recruitment contributes to the actin-dependent structural plasticity induced by [[LTP]] [148 ]. Fortin et al. [148 ] also found that spine enlargement induced by GluA1 overexpression is associated with synaptic recruitment of CP AMPARs and increased mEPSCs; and also found that these events are blocked by IEM-1460—an agonist selective for CP-AMPARs—thus indicating that CP-AMPARs are involved in these events. However, Gray et al. [150 ] found that IEM-1460 blockage of GluA2-lacking AMPARs had no effect on [[LTP]], indicating that [[LTP]] is unrelated to the insertion of GluA2-lacking AMPA receptors at the synapse. The data of Gray et al. [150 ] are also consistent with a study reporting that GluA2-lacking AMPA receptors are not inserted into synapses following the induction of [[LTP]] in hippocampal slices from young animals [149 ], suggesting the role of CP-AMPARs in [[LTP]] could be agedependent. Clearly the role of GluA2-lacking AMPA receptors in [[LTP]] still remains to be clarified. The mechanisms and routes by which AMPARs reach the synapse have not been completely elucidated. Correia et al. [152 ] investigated the short-range translocation of GluA1- containing AMPARs from the dendritic shaft to the spine. Their findings indicate that [[AMPAR]]-containing phosphorylated GluA1 is bound, via the adaptor protein Rab11, to the motor protein myosin Va, which seems to mediate [[AMPAR]] entry to the spine. Subsequent [[AMPAR]] delivery to the synapse occurs by two mechanisms: lateral diffusion within the spine membrane to the postsynaptic membrane [1 , 153 , 154 , 155 , 156 ] and exocytosis from recycling endosomes near [157 , 158 , 159 ] or at the synapse [160 ]. According to the three-step model of Choquet and colleagues, AMPARs of the intracellular pool are first inserted into the extra/perisynaptic surface, they then diffuse laterally to the postsynaptic membrane [1 , 153 , 154 , 155 , 156 ], and are retained there by interactions with scaffold proteins [161 ]. This model currently appears as the most plausible one accounting for [[AMPAR]] recruitment during [[LTP]]; however the order and importance of these steps, and in particular whether lateral movement of AMPARs precedes or follows membrane insertion, remain controversial. Thus, the presence of a pre-existing population of AMPARs at extrasynaptic membrane sites [1 , 162 ] constitutes indirect evidence for a “trapping first-exocytosis second” model in which recruitment of pre-existing extrasynaptic AMPARs to the postsynaptic membrane occurs first, and this followed by membrane insertion of newly recruited receptors to replenish those in extrasynaptic membrane pool [1 , 162 ]. Furthermore, [[AMPAR]] exocytosis occurs within minutes of NMDAR activation, a relatively slow time frame [153 , 159 ] in comparison to the instantaneous onset of [[LTP]] that occurs after such activation—supporting the idea that lateral movement of AMPARs is the initial step in [[LTP]] [163 ]. That exocytosis of recycled endosomes is important during the [[LTP]] is supported by the finding that the displacement of postsynaptic endocytic zones (Ezs) completely prevents [[LTP]] [164 ]. Direct evidence for activity-regulated [[AMPAR]] exocytosis has been obtained using high-resolution live cell imaging [157 ]. Exocytosis of AMPARs occurs in specific domains lateral to the PSD, which are enriched for the SNARE protein syntaxin-4 (Stx4). Stx4 appears to define a specific domain required for [[AMPAR]] exocytosis during synaptic potentiation, since disruption of Stx4 by a dominant-negative approach inhibited activity-induced [[AMPAR]] exocytosis and impaired [[LTP]] at hippocampal synapses [157 ]. To date, the precise location of activitydriven postsynaptic exocytosis remains controversial [141 , 153 , 154 , 157 , 158 , 159 , 160 ]. Complexins have recently emerged as important regulators of calcium-dependent [[AMPAR]] exocytosis in [[LTP]] [165 ]. Complexins are small synaptic proteins involved in neurotransmitter release [166 ] by promoting SNARE complex formation [167 ] and activation [168 , 169 ]. Mice lacking complexin-2 show impaired [[LTP]] [170 , 171 ]. Ahmad et al. [165 ] recently showed that these SNARE complex-binding proteins are required for postsynaptic exocytosis, which specifically occurs during [[LTP]], although complexin1–2 was not shown to be required for basal exocytosis.
[[LTP]] is characterized by long-lasting potentiation of [[AMPAR]]-mediated EPSCs [121 ]. Current increase is mediated by post-translational modifications to AMPARs in the early phase of [[LTP]], and by the production of new AMPARs in the late phase [121 , 122 , 123 ]. In the initial phase of [[LTP]], GluA1-containing AMPARs are recruited to the synapse [76 , 124 , 125 ] (Fig. 3 ). According to the widely accepted model, GluA1–GluA2 receptors are excluded from synapses unless an [[LTP]] stimulus is provided, whereas GluA2–GluA3 receptors traffic to the synapse constitutively. This difference in trafficking behavior is thought to be mediated by the C-tails of individual subunit proteins [126 ]. Evidence in favor of this model is that [[LTP]] is impaired in GluA1-KO mice [127 ] and that [[LTP]] is normal in GluA2–GluA3 double KO mice [126 ]. Furthermore, impairment depends on age, so that GluA1- KO mice show [[LTP]] when young, but by postnatal day 42, [[LTP]] has declined to very low levels [128 ]. The occurrence of [[LTP]] in young GluA1-KO animals indicates that a GluA1- independent form of [[LTP]] can occur when GluA1-containing AMPARs are not available [128 ]. This is further supported by the recent finding that [[LTP]] can occur “normally” in neurons in which the genes for GluA1, GluA2, and GluA3 have been deleted [129 ]. Conflicting results have been obtained regarding the role of GluA1 C-terminal tail interactions with PDZdomain proteins in [[LTP]]. When the GluA1 C-terminus fragment was overexpressed [76 ] or the [[PDZ]]-binding motif of GluA1 mutated [130 ], GluA1 delivery to the synapse was impaired and [[LTP]] prevented in CA1 pyramidal neurons in slice culture [76 , 130 ]. However, an in vivo study in knockin mice with truncated GluA1 found that [[LTP]] was induced in the absence of the GluA1 [[PDZ]] ligand motif [131 ]. These discrepant findings would appear to be model-dependent. The role of the GluA1 subunit in [[LTP]] was further investigated by Selcher et al. [132 ] using a mouse strain lacking this subunit. Their data indicated that GluA1 was specifically recruited in [[LTP]] at both active (having both AMPARand NMDAR-mediated synaptic transmission) and silent synapses (lacking [[AMPAR]]-mediated transmission) [132 ]. By contrast, GluA1 loss did not impair LTD [132 ]. The situation is further complicated by the recent finding of Granger et al. [129 ] that the cytoplasmic tail of GluA1 is not required for [[AMPAR]] trafficking or, therefore [[LTP]]. In their experimental model—which deleted genes for GluA1, GluA2, and GluA3 and re-inserted them one at a time, often with C-tail mutations—they found that AMPARs made of any single subunit could efficiently mediate [[LTP]], and that even kainate could do so. The only prerequisite for [[LTP]] in their system seemed to be the presence of a large reserve pool of glutamate receptors that could move to synapses. Of course their system may be too artificial: KO of the two or three principal [[AMPAR]] subunits may fundamentally alter the expression of the proteins that normally orchestrate [[AMPAR]] trafficking. Nevertheless, Granger and colleagues’ data do show that synapses can display remarkable adaptability, and should stimulate further studies to elucidate how [[AMPAR]]-mediated [[LTP]] is controlled. During the initiation of [[LTP]], NMDARs are activated to enable the calcium influx [133 ] that is critical for the activation of kinases—notably [[CaMKII]], PKC and [[PKA]]—that catalyze the phosphorylation of GluA1 [114 , 134 ], 135 , 136 , 137 ]. In turn, the phosphorylation state of the GluA1 subunit influences [[AMPAR]] insertion into the postsynaptic membrane. Four serine residues (Ser831, Ser845, Ser818, and Ser816) and one threonine residue (Thr840) on the GluA1 subunit can be phosphorylated [135 , 136 , 138 , 139 ]. Initially, only Ser831 (phosphorylated by [[CaMKII]] and PKC) and Ser845 (phosphorylated by [[PKA]]) were thought to be involved in [[LTP]] since phosphorylation at these sites is associated with [[AMPAR]] insertion at the postsynaptic membrane [140 , 141 ]. However, recent work has shown that Ser818 and Ser816 are also phosphorylated by PKC and that this phosphorylation also contributes to [[AMPAR]] insertion at the postsynaptic membrane during [[LTP]] [138 ]. Phosphorylation of these residues enhances the binding of GluA1 with protein 4.1N; by contrast the palmitoylation on cys-811 negatively regulates this interaction [142 ]. It was known that GluA1-4.1N binding regulates GluA1 surface expression [67 ], however, Lin et al. [142 ] reported that 4.1N is required for activity-dependent GluA1 insertion to extrasynaptic surface pools [142 ]. Extrasynaptic pools of AMPARs probably serve as a source of AMPARs for delivery to synapses during [[LTP]], and replenishing these extrasynaptic [[AMPAR]] pools seems important for [[LTP]] maintenance. In fact, acute knockdown of 4.1N impairs [[LTP]] maintenance without affecting the initial phase of [[LTP]] [142 ]. Conversely, phosphorylation of Thr840 is associated with [[AMPAR]] removal and LTD [135 , 143 ]. Recently, another protein kinase, the atypical PKC isoform M zeta (PKMξ ), has been shown to be involved in [[LTP]] [144 ]. PKMξ  increases AMPARs levels at the postsynaptic membrane via up-regulation of [[AMPAR]] trafficking that is dependent on the presence of GluA2 and also the N -ethylmaleimide- sensitive factor (NFS) [145 ]. Inhibition of PKMξ  prevents the maintenance of [[LTP]] but has no effect on its induction [144 , 146 ]. Findings on the role of calcium permeable (CP-) AMPARs (lacking GluA2) in [[LTP]] are conflicting [147 , 148 , 149 , 150 , 151 ]. Plant et al. [147 ] reported that [[LTP]] in CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons causes rapid and transient incorporation of GluA2-lacking receptors, which are subsequently replaced by GluA2-containing AMPARs. In agreement with these findings, Guire et al. [151 ] reported that the synaptic incorporation of CP-AMPARs is regulated by CaM-Kinase I; furthermore, this recruitment contributes to the actin-dependent structural plasticity induced by [[LTP]] [148 ]. Fortin et al. [148 ] also found that spine enlargement induced by GluA1 overexpression is associated with synaptic recruitment of CP AMPARs and increased mEPSCs; and also found that these events are blocked by IEM-1460—an agonist selective for CP-AMPARs—thus indicating that CP-AMPARs are involved in these events. However, Gray et al. [150 ] found that IEM-1460 blockage of GluA2-lacking AMPARs had no effect on [[LTP]], indicating that [[LTP]] is unrelated to the insertion of GluA2-lacking AMPA receptors at the synapse. The data of Gray et al. [150 ] are also consistent with a study reporting that GluA2-lacking AMPA receptors are not inserted into synapses following the induction of [[LTP]] in hippocampal slices from young animals [149 ], suggesting the role of CP-AMPARs in [[LTP]] could be agedependent. Clearly the role of GluA2-lacking AMPA receptors in [[LTP]] still remains to be clarified. The mechanisms and routes by which AMPARs reach the synapse have not been completely elucidated. Correia et al. [152 ] investigated the short-range translocation of GluA1- containing AMPARs from the dendritic shaft to the spine. Their findings indicate that [[AMPAR]]-containing phosphorylated GluA1 is bound, via the adaptor protein Rab11, to the motor protein myosin Va, which seems to mediate [[AMPAR]] entry to the spine. Subsequent [[AMPAR]] delivery to the synapse occurs by two mechanisms: lateral diffusion within the spine membrane to the postsynaptic membrane [1 , 153 , 154 , 155 , 156 ] and exocytosis from recycling endosomes near [157 , 158 , 159 ] or at the synapse [160 ]. According to the three-step model of Choquet and colleagues, AMPARs of the intracellular pool are first inserted into the extra/perisynaptic surface, they then diffuse laterally to the postsynaptic membrane [1 , 153 , 154 , 155 , 156 ], and are retained there by interactions with scaffold proteins [161 ]. This model currently appears as the most plausible one accounting for [[AMPAR]] recruitment during [[LTP]]; however the order and importance of these steps, and in particular whether lateral movement of AMPARs precedes or follows membrane insertion, remain controversial. Thus, the presence of a pre-existing population of AMPARs at extrasynaptic membrane sites [1 , 162 ] constitutes indirect evidence for a “trapping first-exocytosis second” model in which recruitment of pre-existing extrasynaptic AMPARs to the postsynaptic membrane occurs first, and this followed by membrane insertion of newly recruited receptors to replenish those in extrasynaptic membrane pool [1 , 162 ]. Furthermore, [[AMPAR]] exocytosis occurs within minutes of NMDAR activation, a relatively slow time frame [153 , 159 ] in comparison to the instantaneous onset of [[LTP]] that occurs after such activation—supporting the idea that lateral movement of AMPARs is the initial step in [[LTP]] [163 ]. That exocytosis of recycled endosomes is important during the [[LTP]] is supported by the finding that the displacement of postsynaptic endocytic zones (Ezs) completely prevents [[LTP]] [164 ]. Direct evidence for activity-regulated [[AMPAR]] exocytosis has been obtained using high-resolution live cell imaging [157 ]. Exocytosis of AMPARs occurs in specific domains lateral to the PSD, which are enriched for the SNARE protein syntaxin-4 (Stx4). Stx4 appears to define a specific domain required for [[AMPAR]] exocytosis during synaptic potentiation, since disruption of Stx4 by a dominant-negative approach inhibited activity-induced [[AMPAR]] exocytosis and impaired [[LTP]] at hippocampal synapses [157 ]. To date, the precise location of activitydriven postsynaptic exocytosis remains controversial [141 , 153 , 154 , 157 , 158 , 159 , 160 ]. Complexins have recently emerged as important regulators of calcium-dependent [[AMPAR]] exocytosis in [[LTP]] [165 ]. Complexins are small synaptic proteins involved in neurotransmitter release [166 ] by promoting SNARE complex formation [167 ] and activation [168 , 169 ]. Mice lacking complexin-2 show impaired [[LTP]] [170 , 171 ]. Ahmad et al. [165 ] recently showed that these SNARE complex-binding proteins are required for postsynaptic exocytosis, which specifically occurs during [[LTP]], although complexin1–2 was not shown to be required for basal exocytosis.


;*[[AMPAR]] trafficking in LTD
;*[[AMPAR]] trafficking in LTD
Line 164: Line 168:
;*Soluble released factors  
;*Soluble released factors  


BDNF was the first soluble molecule shown to have a role in homeostatic plasticity [197, 223]. In particular, Rutherford et al. [197] showed that low levels of BDNF trigger synaptic up-scaling in cultured cortical pyramidal neurons. In fact, scavenging endogenous BDNF with a soluble form of its receptor (TrkB-IgG) mimicked activity deprivation and induced up-scaling of excitatory synapses; while exogenous BDNF blocked the synaptic up-scaling that follows chronic activity blockade with TTX. BDNF is also important for the pre-synaptic enhancement that follows chronic activity deprivation. Treatment of cultured hippocampal neurons with the [[AMPAR]] blocker NBQX causes GluA1 accumulation at the synapse, which creates the conditions for retrograde signaling once the block is removed. Factors essential for this signaling include calcium (which enters through GluA1 homotetramers), BDNF, and NO [221]. [[AMPAR]] blockade triggers BDNF synthesis, which drives presynaptic scaling via its presynaptic receptor TrkB. TrkB signaling, together with calcium influx, which enters through P/N/Q presynaptic channels, accelerate synaptic vesicle turnover [224]. TNF-α is a well-known regulator of [[AMPAR]] trafficking [225, 226, 227, 228]. Moreover, TNF-α released from glial cells has been shown to be essential for the up-scaling reaction to TTX—a process that does not occur in TNF-α KO mice [229]. The mechanism by which TNF-α exerts these effects is unclear. β3-integrin could be involved, since acute treatment with TNF-α increases surface levels of β3-integrin: this molecule is known to be required for synaptic scaling [230], and its surface expression correlates with the quantity of [[AMPAR]] at the post-synaptic membrane [230]. Steinmetz and Turrigiano [231] recently proposed that TNF-α’s role in synaptic scaling is not instructive but permissive: it would maintain synapses in a plastic state that allows synaptic compensation to occur. In support of their hypothesis, it has been found that chronic TNF-α signaling blockade alters PSD composition, increasing SAP102 and decreasing PSD-95 expression [231] so that they resemble immature synapses [101], which would in turn have consequences for [[AMPAR]] distribution in the synapse. RA has been identified as a regulator of dendritic protein synthesis in homeostatic plasticity. Following activity blockade with TTX or (2R)-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (APV), RA synthesis is enhanced both in cultured hippocampal neurons and [[brain]] slices [217]. In turn, RA enhances the local synthesis of GluA1 (but not GluA2), thus favoring its insertion into the membrane. RA acts through its receptor RARalpha [217] and the fragile X-mental retardation protein FMRP acts downstream of the RA pathway and is necessary for GluA1 synthesis, suggesting that deregulation of homeostatic plasticity might contribute to the pathogenesis of fragile X syndrome [232].
BDNF was the first soluble molecule shown to have a role in homeostatic plasticity [197, 223]. In particular, Rutherford et al. [197] showed that low levels of BDNF trigger synaptic up-scaling in cultured cortical pyramidal neurons. In fact, scavenging endogenous BDNF with a soluble form of its receptor (TrkB-IgG) mimicked activity deprivation and induced up-scaling of excitatory synapses; while exogenous BDNF blocked the synaptic up-scaling that follows chronic activity blockade with TTX. BDNF is also important for the pre-synaptic enhancement that follows chronic activity deprivation. Treatment of cultured hippocampal neurons with the [[AMPAR]] blocker NBQX causes GluA1 accumulation at the synapse, which creates the conditions for retrograde signaling once the block is removed. Factors essential for this signaling include calcium (which enters through GluA1 homotetramers), BDNF, and NO [221]. [[AMPAR]] blockade triggers BDNF synthesis, which drives presynaptic scaling via its presynaptic receptor TrkB. TrkB signaling, together with calcium influx, which enters through P/N/Q presynaptic channels, accelerate synaptic vesicle turnover [224]. TNF-α is a well-known regulator of [[AMPAR]] trafficking [225, 226, 227, 228]. Moreover, TNF-α released from glial cells has been shown to be essential for the up-scaling reaction to TTX—a process that does not occur in TNF-α KO mice [229]. The mechanism by which TNF-α exerts these effects is unclear. β3-integrin could be involved, since acute treatment with TNF-α increases surface levels of β3-integrin: this molecule is known to be required for synaptic scaling [230], and its surface expression correlates with the quantity of [[AMPAR]] at the post-synaptic membrane [230]. Steinmetz and Turrigiano [231] recently proposed that TNF-α’s role in synaptic scaling is not instructive but permissive: it would maintain synapses in a plastic state that allows synaptic compensation to occur. In support of their hypothesis, it has been found that chronic TNF-α signaling blockade alters PSD composition, increasing SAP102 and decreasing [[PSD-95]] expression [231] so that they resemble immature synapses [101], which would in turn have consequences for [[AMPAR]] distribution in the synapse. RA has been identified as a regulator of dendritic protein synthesis in homeostatic plasticity. Following activity blockade with TTX or (2R)-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (APV), RA synthesis is enhanced both in cultured hippocampal neurons and [[brain]] slices [217]. In turn, RA enhances the local synthesis of GluA1 (but not GluA2), thus favoring its insertion into the membrane. RA acts through its receptor RARalpha [217] and the fragile X-mental retardation protein FMRP acts downstream of the RA pathway and is necessary for GluA1 synthesis, suggesting that deregulation of homeostatic plasticity might contribute to the pathogenesis of fragile X syndrome [232].


;*Cell adhesion molecules (CAMS)  
;*Cell adhesion molecules (CAMS)  
Line 173: Line 177:
;*PSD scaffolding proteins  
;*PSD scaffolding proteins  


Scaffolding proteins are crucial for the structural organization of the PSD. They are also involved in the trafficking of receptors to the postsynaptic membrane and their stabilization there [240]. PICK1 and MAGUK scaffolding proteins have recently been shown to be crucially involved in homeostatic plasticity [222, 241]. Anggono et al. [222] showed that PICK1 is specifically required for inactivity-induced (TTX treatment) [[AMPAR]] up-scaling but not for hyperactivity-induced (bicucullin treatment) down-scaling. PICK1 is down-regulated during synaptic up-scaling, enabling GluA2/3 recruitment from the intracellular pool to the membrane. Furthermore, in PICK1 KO neurons, [[AMPAR]] composition and trafficking are impaired and the regulatory mechanisms responsible for homeostatic plasticity are compromised. Sun et al. [241] recently explored the role of the MAGUK scaffolding proteins PSD93 and PSD95 in homeostatic plasticity in neocortical pyramidal neurons. These proteins were found to be essential for assembly of the protein–protein association network, which is required for homeostatic adjustments of [[AMPAR]] abundance in the synapse. PSD-95 was found necessary for down-scaling, whereas PSD-95 and PSD-93 were both involved in synaptic up-scaling [241].
Scaffolding proteins are crucial for the structural organization of the PSD. They are also involved in the trafficking of receptors to the postsynaptic membrane and their stabilization there [240]. PICK1 and MAGUK scaffolding proteins have recently been shown to be crucially involved in homeostatic plasticity [222, 241]. Anggono et al. [222] showed that PICK1 is specifically required for inactivity-induced (TTX treatment) [[AMPAR]] up-scaling but not for hyperactivity-induced (bicucullin treatment) down-scaling. PICK1 is down-regulated during synaptic up-scaling, enabling GluA2/3 recruitment from the intracellular pool to the membrane. Furthermore, in PICK1 KO neurons, [[AMPAR]] composition and trafficking are impaired and the regulatory mechanisms responsible for homeostatic plasticity are compromised. Sun et al. [241] recently explored the role of the MAGUK scaffolding proteins PSD93 and [[PSD95]] in homeostatic plasticity in neocortical pyramidal neurons. These proteins were found to be essential for assembly of the protein–protein association network, which is required for homeostatic adjustments of [[AMPAR]] abundance in the synapse. [[PSD-95]] was found necessary for down-scaling, whereas [[PSD-95]] and PSD-93 were both involved in synaptic up-scaling [241].


;*Intracellular signaling molecules  
;*Intracellular signaling molecules  
Line 188: Line 192:


[[AMPAR]] trafficking to and from the synapse has been one of the most fascinating and intriguing areas of neuroscience over the past 20 years, as it underlies [[LTP]] and LTD—processes that underlie at least some aspects of memory and learning. Much progress has been made in identifying the proteins involved in [[AMPAR]] insertion into and removal from the synapse; many of the molecular mechanisms contributing to these events are also clear. However, it is still not clear how the receptors diffuse laterally to and from the synapses, nor is it clear how they are directed to and from the complex of proteins present in the PSD. We also have to remember that most of the information contributing to this progress has come from cultured neocortical neurons from rodents, genetically or otherwise manipulated to KO or overexpress proteins of interest. That such studies cannot provide all the answers are illustrated by the wealth of conflicting results that have been obtained, and most graphically by the recent paper of Granger et al. which, at first sight, seems to have overturned a consensus on the role of [[AMPAR]] subunits and their C-terminal tails in [[LTP]] that took a wealth of data and 10 years to establish. It  would seem that the way forward is to develop new in vivo methods to resolve these contradictions and stimulate further progress in this exciting area of neuroscience.
[[AMPAR]] trafficking to and from the synapse has been one of the most fascinating and intriguing areas of neuroscience over the past 20 years, as it underlies [[LTP]] and LTD—processes that underlie at least some aspects of memory and learning. Much progress has been made in identifying the proteins involved in [[AMPAR]] insertion into and removal from the synapse; many of the molecular mechanisms contributing to these events are also clear. However, it is still not clear how the receptors diffuse laterally to and from the synapses, nor is it clear how they are directed to and from the complex of proteins present in the PSD. We also have to remember that most of the information contributing to this progress has come from cultured neocortical neurons from rodents, genetically or otherwise manipulated to KO or overexpress proteins of interest. That such studies cannot provide all the answers are illustrated by the wealth of conflicting results that have been obtained, and most graphically by the recent paper of Granger et al. which, at first sight, seems to have overturned a consensus on the role of [[AMPAR]] subunits and their C-terminal tails in [[LTP]] that took a wealth of data and 10 years to establish. It  would seem that the way forward is to develop new in vivo methods to resolve these contradictions and stimulate further progress in this exciting area of neuroscience.
}}


==Hayashi · Shi · Esteban · Piccini · Poncer · Malinow {{Dot}} 2000==
 
{{SlideBox|Driving AMPA Receptors into Synapses by LTP and CaMKII: Requirement for GluR1 and PDZ Domain Interaction|
 
}}<!-- END ARTICLE -->
 
 
==Hayashi · Shi · Esteban · Piccini · Poncer · Malinow 2000 • Science==
{{SlideBox|Driving AMPA Receptors into Synapses by [[LTP]] and [[CaMKII]]: Requirement for GluR1 and [[PDZ]] Domain Interaction|
 
===Brads Notes===
 
*Cultured hippocampal neurons
*Sinbis virus delivered construct
**Construct: GFP linked to catalytic domain of [[CaMKII]] (tCaMKII-GFP)
*construct increased constitutive [[CaMKII]] activity in baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells
*In hippocampal neurons GFP detected in dendritic arbors and spines
*measured synaptic responses in two adjacent neurons
**one infected with tCaMKII, one uninfected
**tCaMKII-GFP enhanced transmission
 
;[[Electrophysiology]] assay
*The current-voltage (I-V ) relationship of AMPARs is determined by the GluR2 subunit
*AMPARs with GluR2 show linear I-V relations; AMPARs lacking GluR2 show little outward current at +40 mV
**GluR1 is [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inward-rectifier_potassium_ion_channel Inward Rectifying]
*Most AMPARs in hippocampal pyramidal cells contain the GluR2 subunit
 
*We overexpressed the [[AMPAR]] GluR1 subunit in hippocampal slice neurons
**incorporation of recombinant receptors into synapses would be expected to increase rectification
*GluR1-GFP is widely distributed throughout the dendritic arbor, but little is incorporated into synapses in the absence of activity
*In agreement with this, expression of GluR1-GFP had no effect on either the amplitude or rectification of synaptic transmission
 
*To determine if [[CaMKII]] activity could drive GluR1- GFP into synapses, we coexpressed GluR1-GFP and tCaMKII
**used internal ribosomal entry site (IRES) construct
*BHK cells expressing this construct showed increased constitutive [[CaMKII]] activity
*Pairwise recordings from infected and noninfected cells showed that transmission was enhanced
*transmission showed increased rectification
**indicating a contribution of homomeric GluR1-GFP to transmission
*rectification was due to coexpression of the two proteins
**transmission onto cells expressing either tCaMKII or GluR1-GFP alone had rectification comparable to that in uninfected cells
;*These results show that [[CaMKII]] activity induces the insertion of homomeric GluR1-GFP into the synapse.
 
*GluR1 is phosphorylated by [[CaMKII]] at Ser831 during [[LTP]].
*To examine if phosphorylation is required for delivery, we substituted Ser831 with Ala
**GluR1(S831A)-GFP
*mutation did not block delivery
*coexpression with tCaMKII showed the same increase in rectification as that seen previously
 
 
*localization of many membrane proteins is controlled by a class of proteins containing [[PDZ]] domains
*the cytosolic COOH-terminus has a consensus (S/T)X(V/L) (TGL)
*Serine or threonine at 22 position appears to be crucial because a mutation at this site can prevent associations
*The last three amino acids of the COOH-terminus of GluR1 are TGL
*We converted the GluR1 COOH-terminus from TGL to AGL,
*when expressed in HEK293 cells, formed functional AMPARs that showed the normal rectification
*When expressed in hippocampal neurons, this protein was detected in dendrites
*This construct showed no effect on transmission when expressed alone
*when GluR1(AGL) and tCaMKII were coexpressed in hippocampal the effects of tCaMKII on synaptic response amplitude and rectification were completely blocked
 
 
*To determine if [[LTP]] delivers AMPARs to synapses, we examined [[LTP]] in cells expressing GluR1
*Whole-cell recordings were obtained from cells expressing or not expressing GluR1.
*[[LTP]] was induced with a pairing protocol isolating pure [[AMPAR]]–mediated responses
*The holding potential was then switched to measure rectification of the [[AMPAR]]–mediated responses
*Similar to the effect of coexpressed [[CaMKII]] and GluR1, rectification was increased after [[LTP]] in cells expressing GluR1 compared to cells not expressing
*We also examined the effects of GluR1(AGL) on [[LTP]].
*we recorded synaptic responses from cells expressing either GluR1 or GluR1(AGL)
*After pairing, cells expressing the control construct displayed stable potentiation lasting at least 50 min
*Cells expressing GluR1(AGL) showed a short-lasting potentiation that decayed over the next 20 min
*45 min after pairing, the responses were significantly depressed from baseline levels
 
 
;The cell-biological mechanisms underlying synaptic plasticity have been difficult to delineate. In part, this is due to the lack of techniques in intact preparations allowing molecular perturbations with spatial and temporal control, as well as the absence of assays for specific molecular events linked to synaptic plasticity.
Here, we generated electrophysiologically tagged receptors to monitor their synaptic delivery during [[LTP]] and increased [[CaMKII]]. In the absence of plasticityinducing stimuli, we saw no evidence for their contribution to transmission. This is consistent with previous results indicating that in the absence of evoked activity, GluR1 is retained within the dendrite (3). Upon coexpression with constitutively active [[CaMKII]] or following [[LTP]] induction, we see that tagged receptors contribute to transmission, indicating their delivery to synapses.
 
;These results demonstrate that incorporation of GluR1-containing AMPA-Rs into synapses is a major mechanism underlying the plasticity produced by activation of [[CaMKII]] and [[LTP]]. This process requires phosphorylation of protein(s) other than GluR1. Furthermore, this delivery requires interactions between the COOH-terminus of GluR1 and [[PDZ]] domain proteins.
 


===Abstract===
===Abstract===
To elucidate mechanisms that control and execute activity-dependent synaptic plasticity, α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionate receptors (AMPA-Rs) with an electrophysiological tag were expressed in rat hippocampal neurons. Long-term potentiation (LTP) or increased activity of the calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) induced delivery of tagged AMPA-Rs into synapses. This effect was not diminished by mutating the CaMKII phosphorylation site on the GluR1 AMPA-R subunit, but was blocked by mutating a predicted PDZ domain interaction site. These results show that LTP and CaMKII activity drive AMPA-Rs to synapses by a mechanism that requires the association between GluR1 and a PDZ domain protein.
To elucidate mechanisms that control and execute activity-dependent synaptic plasticity, α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionate receptors (AMPA-Rs) with an electrophysiological tag were expressed in rat hippocampal neurons. Long-term potentiation ([[LTP]]) or increased activity of the calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II ([[CaMKII]]) induced delivery of tagged AMPA-Rs into synapses. This effect was not diminished by mutating the [[CaMKII]] phosphorylation site on the GluR1 AMPA-R subunit, but was blocked by mutating a predicted [[PDZ]] domain interaction site. These results show that [[LTP]] and [[CaMKII]] activity drive AMPA-Rs to synapses by a mechanism that requires the association between GluR1 and a [[PDZ]] domain protein.




Line 201: Line 277:




}}


}}<!-- END ARTICLE -->
==Bats • Groc • Choquet • 2007 • Cell: Neuron==
{{SlideBox|The Interaction between Stargazin and [[PSD-95]] Regulates [[AMPA Receptor]] Surface Trafficking|
===Abstract===
Accumulation of AMPA receptors at synapses is a fundamental feature of glutamatergic synaptic transmission. Stargazin, a member of the TARP family, is an [[AMPAR]] auxiliary subunit allowing interaction of the receptor with scaffold proteins of the postsynaptic density, such as [[PSD-95]]. How [[PSD-95]] and Stargazin regulate [[AMPAR]] number in synaptic membranes remains elusive. We show, using single quantum dot and FRAP imaging in live hippocampal neurons, that exchange of [[AMPAR]] by lateral diffusion between extrasynaptic and synaptic sites mostly depends on the interaction of Stargazin with [[PSD-95]] and not upon the GluR2 [[AMPAR]] subunit C terminus. Disruption of interactions between Stargazin and [[PSD-95]] strongly increases [[AMPAR]] surface diffusion, preventing [[AMPAR]] accumulation at postsynaptic sites. Furthermore, AMPARs and Stargazin diffuse as complexes in and out synapses. These results propose a model in which the Stargazin- [[PSD-95]] interaction plays a key role to trap and transiently stabilize diffusing AMPARs in the postsynaptic density.
}}<!-- END ARTICLE -->
==Bianchetta • Lam • Jones • Morabito • 2011 • JNeuro==
{{SlideBox|Cdk5 regulates [[PSD-95]] ubiquitination in neurons|
===Abstract===
The kinase Cdk5 and its activator p35 have been implicated in drug addiction, neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s, learning and memory, and synapse maturation and plasticity. However the molecular mechanisms by which Cdk5 regulates synaptic plasticity are still unclear. [[PSD-95]] is a major postsynaptic scaffolding protein of glutamatergic synapses that regulates synaptic strength and plasticity. [[PSD-95]] is ubiquitinated by the Ubiquitin E3 Ligase Mdm2, and rapid and transient [[PSD-95]] ubiquitination has been implicated in NMDA receptor-induced [[AMPA Receptor|AMPA receptor]] endocytosis. Here we demonstrate that genetic or pharmacological reduction of Cdk5 activity increases the interaction of Mdm2 with [[PSD-95]] and enhances [[PSD-95]] ubiquitination without affecting [[PSD-95]] protein levels in vivo  in mice, suggesting a non-proteolytic function of ubiquitinated [[PSD-95]] at synapses. We show that [[PSD-95]] ubiquitination correlates with increased interaction with β -adaptin, a subunit of the clathrin adaptor protein complex AP-2. This interaction is increased by genetic reduction of Cdk5 activity or NMDA receptor stimulation and is dependent on Mdm2. Together these results support a function for Cdk5 in regulating [[PSD-95]] ubiqutination and its interaction with AP-2 and suggest a mechanism by which [[PSD-95]] may regulate NMDA receptor-induced [[AMPA Receptor|AMPA receptor]] endocytosis.


==Intro==
PSD-95 (SAP90) is a major postsynaptic scaffolding protein of glutamatergic synapses and a substrate of Cdk5. PSD-95 has been implicated in synaptic maturation and regulation of synaptic strength and plasticity. The importance of PSD-95 in synaptic plasticity is underscored by the inhibition of NMDA receptor (NMDAR)-induced AMPA receptor (AMPAR) internalization and the impairment of LTD following PSD-95 knockdown. The rapid and transient  ubiquitination of PSD-95 by the Ubiquitin E3 Ligase Mdm2 has been implicated in NMDAR-induced endocytosis of AMPARs, but the mechanisms regulating this posttranslational modification of PSD-95 are still unclear. Since Cdk5 is inactivated by NMDAR stimulation, we investigated whether inactivation of Cdk5 promotes PSD-95 ubiquitination. In this study we report that PSD-95 is ubiquitinated in neurons with reduced Cdk5 activity without affecting PSD-95 protein levels in vivo . We also show that PSD-95 ubiquitination correlates with increased interaction of PSD-95 with β -adaptin, a subunit of the clathrin adaptor protein complex AP-2, and that this interaction is increased under reduced Cdk5 activity or by NMDAR stimulation and is dependent on Mdm2. Together these results suggest a non-proteolytic signaling function for PSD-95 ubiquitination and support a novel function for Cdk5 in the regulation of glutamatergic synapses.




}}<!-- END ARTICLE -->




[[Category:Qual]]
[[Category:Qual]]

Latest revision as of 16:23, 5 June 2013

Qual Qual Journals Quantum Dots AMPA Receptor SAP


Tardin • Cognet • Bats • Lounis • Choquet • 2003 • The EMBO Journal

Direct imaging of lateral movements of AMPA receptors inside synapses


Rao-Ruiz • Spijker • 2011 • Nature Neuroscience

Retrieval-specific endocytosis of GluA2-AMPARs underlies adaptive reconsolidation of contextual fear



Bassani · Folci · Zapata · Passafaro • 2013 • Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences

AMPAR trafficking in synapse maturation and plasticity


Hayashi · Shi · Esteban · Piccini · Poncer · Malinow • 2000 • Science

Driving AMPA Receptors into Synapses by LTP and CaMKII: Requirement for GluR1 and PDZ Domain Interaction


Bats • Groc • Choquet • 2007 • Cell: Neuron

The Interaction between Stargazin and PSD-95 Regulates AMPA Receptor Surface Trafficking


Bianchetta • Lam • Jones • Morabito • 2011 • JNeuro

Cdk5 regulates PSD-95 ubiquitination in neurons