cAMP-EPAC-Dependent Regulation of Gephyrin Phosphorylation and GABA A R Trapping at Inhibitory Synapses

Archive ouverte

Niwa, Fumihiro | Patrizio, Angela | Triller, Antoine | Specht, Christian, G

Edité par CCSD ; Elsevier -

International audience. GABA A and glycine receptors are thought to compete for gephyrin-binding sites at mixed inhibitory synapses. Changes in the occupancy of one receptor type are therefore expected to have opposite effects on the clustering of the other receptors. This does not explain, however, whether different receptors can be regulated independently from one another. Here we show that cAMP-dependent signaling reduces gephyrin phosphorylation at residue S270 in spinal cord neurons. Although no ultrastructural changes of the synaptic scaffold were detected using super-resolution imaging, gephyrin de-phosphorylation was associated with a selective increase in GABA A R diffusion and the loss of the receptors from synapses. As opposed to the PKA-dependent dispersal of a3-containing GlyRs, the regulation of gephyrin phosphorylation and GABA A R dynamics acts via non-canonical EPAC signaling. Subtype-specific changes in receptor mobility can thus differentially contribute to changes in inhibitory synaptic strength, such as the disinhibition of spinal cord neurons during inflammatory processes.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

cAMP-EPAC-Dependent Regulation of Gephyrin Phosphorylation and GABAAR Trapping at Inhibitory Synapses

Archive ouverte | Niwa, Fumihiro | CCSD

International audience

Bidirectional Control of Synaptic GABAAR Clustering by Glutamate and Calcium

Archive ouverte | Bannai, Hiroko | CCSD

International audience

Sequences Flanking the Gephyrin-Binding Site of GlyRβ Tune Receptor Stabilization at Synapses

Archive ouverte | Grünewald, Nora | CCSD

International audience. Abstract The efficacy of synaptic transmission is determined by the number of neurotransmitter receptors at synapses. Their recruitment depends upon the availability of postsynaptic scaffoldi...

Chargement des enrichissements...