A challenge in neuroscience is to understand the mechanisms underlying synapse formation. Most excitatory synapses in the brain are built on spines, which are actin-rich protrusions from dendrites. Spines are a major substrate of brain plasticity, and spine pathologies are observed in various mental illnesses. Here we investigate the role of neurobeachin (Nbea), a multidomain protein previously linked to cases of autism, in synaptogenesis. We show that deletion of Nbea leads to reduced numbers of spinous synapses in cultured neurons from complete knockouts and in cortical tissue from heterozygous mice, accompanied by altered miniature postsynaptic currents. In addition, excitatory synapses terminate mostly at dendritic shafts instead of spine heads in Nbea mutants, and actin becomes less enriched synaptically. As actin and synaptopodin, a spine-associated protein with actin-bundling activity, accumulate ectopically near the Golgi apparatus of mutant neurons, a role emerges for Nbea in trafficking important cargo to pre- and postsynaptic compartments.
A challenge in neuroscience is to understand the mechanisms underlying synapse formation. Most excitatory synapses in the brain are built on spines, which are actin-rich protrusions from dendrites. Spines are a major substrate of brain plasticity, and spine pathologies are observed in various mental illnesses. Here we investigate the role of neurobeachin (Nbea), a multidomain protein previously linked to cases of autism, in synaptogenesis. We show that deletion of Nbea leads to reduced numbers of spinous synapses in cultured neurons from complete knockouts and in cortical tissue from heterozygous mice, accompanied by altered miniature postsynaptic currents. In addition, excitatory synapses terminate mostly at dendritic shafts instead of spine heads in Nbea mutants, and actin becomes less enriched synaptically. As actin and synaptopodin, a spine-associated protein with actin-bundling activity, accumulate ectopically near the Golgi apparatus of mutant neurons, a role emerges for Nbea in trafficking important cargo to pre- and postsynaptic compartments.
Dendritic spines are small, actin-rich protrusions of the dendritic membrane that serve
as primary recipients of excitatory synaptic input in the mammalian central nervous
system12. Spines constitute a specialized compartment that contains
the postsynaptic signalling machinery, and organelles such as endosomes or, if present,
the spine apparatus3. Many studies indicate that a mutual relationship
exists between spine morphology and function of synapses14, and that
the actin cytoskeleton has a critical role in modulating the efficacy of their pre- and
postsynaptic terminals25. Dendritic spines can be stable, but they are
also dynamic structures that undergo morphological remodelling during development and in
adaptation to sensory stimuli or in learning and memory46. As numerous
psychiatric and neurological diseases are accompanied by alterations of spine numbers or
size678, the elucidation of mechanisms that regulate formation
and plasticity of spinous synapses is important.As neurons are polarized cells and their synapses constitute asymmetric structures, it
has been proposed that trafficking of specialized cargo to presynaptic terminals and
postsynaptic spines contributes significantly to the development of mature contacts3.Neurobeachin (Nbea) is a molecule that might be involved in the subcellular trafficking
of membrane proteins in neurons (for review ref. 9).
MammalianNbea is a cytosolic multidomain protein that was discovered as a component of
synapses, and found associated with postsynaptic plasma membranes and polymorphic
vesiculo-tubulo-cisternal endomembranes10. Moreover, Nbea concentrates
near the trans-Golgi network, and its membrane association is stimulated by
GTP and antagonized by
brefeldin, suggesting a functional
link to the post-Golgi sorting or targeting of proteins10. Such a role in
targeting has been supported by studies of invertebrate orthologues of Nbea and its
ubiquitous isoform Lrba11. SEL-2, the Nbea homologue in Caenorhabditis
elegans is responsible for the targeting of LIN-12/Notch and LET-23/EGFR in
vulval precursor cells by regulating endosomal traffic and receptor activity12. Affecting a similar pathway in Drosophila, deletion of the fly ortholog
rugose caused eye defects based on defective Notch and EGFR signalling1314. Structurally, Nbea and its orthologues belong to the family of
BEACH domain-containing proteins15. In addition, Nbea binds to the
regulatory subunit of PKA, therefore allowing classification as an A kinase-anchoring
protein10.Nbea is important from a clinical point of view because it spans a common fragile site on
human chromosome 13q13, FRA13 (refs 16, 17), and heterozygous disruptions of the Nbea gene have been
linked to idiopathic cases of non-familial autism18192021.
Exploring the idea of autism as a 'synaptopathy'2223, we previously
characterized mouse models of candidate genes for autistic symptoms such as MeCP2,
neurexins or neuroligins that show impairments of synaptic function24252627. This and other work indicates that imbalances between
excitatory and inhibitory synaptic activity might form a prominent aspect of the
pathomechanism22. Consistently, analyses of deletions of Nbea in mice
demonstrated a prominent synaptic phenotype2829. Knockouts suffer from
lethal paralysis in newborns, which is due to an abolished evoked release of presynaptic
vesicles at neuromuscular junctions whereas endplate morphology appears intact29. Investigation of the respiratory network in the foetal brainstem
demonstrated the importance of Nbea for brain synapses because both action
potential-dependent and -independent release are decreased28. Although
these earlier investigations revealed an essential role for Nbea at peripheral and
central synapses, they could not address important mechanistic questions. Most notably,
how does Nbea regulate synaptic function and formation, and how does the far-upstream
location of Nbea in the secretory pathway relate to the pleiotropy of synaptic
phenotypes?Here, we investigate a hitherto unknown role for Nbea in spine formation by analysing
cultured hippocampal neurons from homozygous knockout mice and cortical brain tissue
from adult animals that lack only one Nbea allele. We demonstrate a reduced
number of spinous synapses in homozygous and heterozygous neurons, leading to
structurally and functionally altered contacts. Moreover, the lack of enriched
filamentous actin at mutant synapses, together with the overlapping accumulation of
actin and the actin-associated spine protein synaptopodin near the trans-Golgi
network reveals novel aspects how Nbea may affect trafficking of pre- and postsynaptic
components.
Results
Reduction of axo-spinous synapses in Nbea-deficient neurons
Homozygous Nbea knockout mice die after birth due to impairment of synaptic
release from neuromuscular junctions and synapses in the respiratory
network2829. To overcome the limitations in the analysis
imposed by premature death, we first investigated the role of Nbea in cultured
neurons.To monitor synaptogenesis in vitro, primary neurons were cultured at low
density for 14 and 21 days (DIV14 and DIV21). Cultures from individual
hippocampi of homozygous knockouts and littermate controls (Supplementary Fig. S1) were labelled with
antibodies against presynaptic synapsin, and postsynaptic PSD-95 or gephyrin to
distinguish between putative excitatory and inhibitory synapses (Fig. 1a–d). Presynaptic development was similar in both
genotypes as assayed by quantification of synapsin-positive punctae (at DIV21,
Nbea+/+: 23.40±1.97 punctae per 10 μm
dendrite length, n=7 cultures;
Nbea−/−: 19.48±1.37,
n=9 cultures; P=0.1140), demonstrating that complete deletion of
Nbea did not interfere with the establishment of synapses in general, consistent
with earlier studies2829. However, in knockouts, we observed
that excitatory contacts predominantly formed at dendritic shafts (Fig. 1b) instead of a more juxta-dendritic position typical
for contacts on spines (Fig. 1a). As the location of
gephyrin-positive inhibitory contacts appeared unchanged (Fig.
1c,d), these data suggest that there was a specific reduction of
spinous synapses. To directly investigate this possibility, we transfected
neurons with monomeric red fluorescent protein (soluble mRFP), which fills all
processes including spines (Fig. 1e–h). We
observed fewer spines on mutant cells compared with controls (Fig. 1i). Knockout dendrites carried a 48% lower number of mature
spine-like protrusions on DIV21 (Nbea+/+: 4.31±0.50,
n=6 cultures; Nbea−/−:
2.24±0.43, n=6 cultures; P=0.0047), and the diameter of
secondary dendrites was slightly reduced (Nbea+/+:
0.86±0.05 μm, n=4 cultures;
Nbea−/−: 0.56±0.03
μm, n=4 cultures; P=0.0015). The difference in spine
density was even more pronounced in younger cultures (DIV14;
Nbea+/+: 2.52±0.19, n=6 cultures;
Nbea−/−: 0.33±0.06, n=6
cultures; P<0.0001) when spines are formed30,
suggesting that Nbea is required for the normal formation of spinous synapses in
culture.
Figure 1
Nbea knockout neurons in culture fail to develop a normal number of dendritic
spines.
(a,b) Immunocytochemistry of dendrites from wild-type (+/+) and
Nbea-deficient (−/−) neurons co-labelled with
antibodies against synapsin (green), PSD-95 (red) and MAP2 (blue) to
visualize pre- and postsynaptic elements of excitatory synapses at DIV21.
(c,d) Same experiment as in a,b but using
antibodies against gephyrin (red) instead of PSD-95 to reveal inhibitory
contacts. (e–h) Representative images of
spine-bearing dendrites from wild-type and KO hippocampal neurons
transfected with mRFP for 17 days, shown at lower magnification in a
low-density culture56 (e,f), and at higher
magnification in confocal images (g,h; arrowheads point to the
spinous protrusions). (i–l) Histograms showing
quantitative comparisons of spine density (i, numbers per dendrite
length; data are from 7–9 independent cultures per genotype), and
spine dimensions (j, spine head area; k, spine length;
l, spine head width; data are from 4–6 independent
cultures per genotype) between wild-type and Nbea-deficient neurons at two
different time points (DIV14 and DIV21) in vitro. All data are
means±s.e.m. *P<0.05, **P<0.001,
***P<0.0001, NS, not significant. Scale bars, 10
μm in a–f, 5 μm in g,
h. DIV, days-in-vitro.
While fewer spines developed in KOs, those that could be detected (arrowheads in
Fig. 1h) were phenotypically normal. Their dimensions
were unchanged and within the range of expected values31 (Fig. 1j–l; spine head area:
Nbea+/+ 0.39±0.05 μm2,
Nbea−/− 0.47±0.03
μm2, P=0.1636; spine length:
Nbea+/+ 0.79±0.06 μm,
Nbea−/− 0.93±0.06
μm, P=0.1150; and spine head width: Nbea+/+
0.54±0.04 μm, Nbea−/−
0.62±0.03 μm, P=0.0874; all data are calculated from
15–30 dendrites in four cultures per genotype). Only in younger
cultures (DIV14), spine length was slightly reduced in KOs
(Nbea+/+ 1.24±0.08 μm,
Nbea−/− 0.94±0.06
μm, P=0.0324).Although studies in cultures combine the advantage of analysing mature neurons
from lethal knockouts with superior visibility32, artefacts are
always a concern. To brace against this problem, we next studied the density and
ultrastructure of synapses in neocortical tissue from adult heterozygous Nbeamice compared with wild-type littermates. These experiments are meaningful
because deletion of one Nbea allele produced a 30% reduction of protein (Supplementary Fig. S2), consistent
with a diminished immunoreactivity and reduced numbers of Nbea-positive neurons
(Supplementary Fig. S2).We performed electron microscopy in the neocortex (Fig.
2a,b), and found a significant 28% reduction in the area density of
axo-spinous synapses compared with controls (Fig. 2c;
Nbea+/+: 3.98±0.42 per 100
μm−2, n=6 cortical series;
Nbea+/−: 2.88±0.24 per 100
μm−2, n=6 cortical series;
P=0.0436). This effect seemed specific because the overall densities
of asymmetric contacts (type 1; Nbea+/+: 21.23±0.51 per
100 μm−2, Nbea+/−:
21.67±1.43 per 100 μm−2;
P=0.7768) and symmetric synapses (type 2; Nbea+/+:
4.05±0.24 per 100 μm−2,
Nbea+/−: 3.85±0.15 per 100
μm−2; P=0.5034) remained
unchanged (Fig. 2d,e). The analysis of additional
parameters such as presynaptic terminal area, synaptic vesicle density, length
of postsynaptic density or width of synaptic cleft revealed no significant
differences (Fig. 2f–i). These results from
adult heterozygous mice are in agreement with our culture data (Fig. 1), validating that Nbea is not required for synapse
establishment in general but is involved in the formation of spinous
synapses.
Figure 2
Selective reduction of axo-spinous synapses in brains of heterozygous
Nbea-mutant mice.
(a,b) Representative electron micrographs from layer 5
somatosensory neocortex of adult wild-type (+/+) and heterozygous Nbea
(+/−) littermate mice (sample spines are highlighted, magenta).
(c–e) Quantitative analysis of three
populations of synapses in brain tissue: area density of spinous synapses
(c), total number of asymmetric (type 1, presumably excitatory)
synapses (d), and symmetric (type 2, presumably inhibitory) contacts
(e), each averaged for all cortical layers from six independent
cortical series derived from wild-type and heterozygous littermate mice,
respectively. (f–i) Histograms showing
quantifications of parameters of individual synapses: presynaptic terminal
area (f), synaptic vesicle density (g), synaptic cleft width
(h) and length of the postsynaptic density (i), measured
on 90–100 randomly chosen asymmetric synapses from all cortical
layers. All data are means±s.e.m. *P<0.05, NS, not
significant. Scale bar, 1 μm in a, b.
Organization of synaptic contacts in absence of Nbea
Although the number of synapsin-positive punctae was normal, the location of
PSD-95-positive clusters was different in cultured KO neurons (Fig. 1a,b). To investigate the distribution of PSD-95 clusters,
stacks of confocal image series (n=10–12 per genotype) were
reconstructed (Fig. 3a,b), demonstrating that PSD-95
mostly concentrated on spine heads in controls, but often clustered at dendritic
shafts in KOs (arrowheads in Fig. 3b). Electron microscopy
of cultures confirmed a comparable ultrastructure of spinous synapses in the KO,
if present, but more frequently revealed asymmetric synapses at the shaft (Fig. 3c,d).
Figure 3
Organization of the postsynaptic compartment in absence of Nbea.
(a,b) Spine-bearing dendrites from mRFP-transfected wild-type
(+/+) and knockout (−/−) neurons in vitro (red)
were co-stained against PSD-95 (green), and stacks of confocal images were
three-dimensionally reconstructed using Imaris software. Arrowheads point to
PSD-95 clusters that form directly at dendritic shafts of mutant neurons.
(c,d) Sample electron micrographs of axo-spinous
(c) and axo-dendritic synapses (d) as observed in control and
mutant hippocampal neurons. SV, synaptic vesicles; D, dendrite.
(e–g) Quantitative analysis of PSD-95 clusters,
averaged from 25–29 dendrites from 3–4 independent
cultures per genotype, localized on spine heads (e) versus those on
dendritic shafts (f), and their ratio in neuronal cultures of both
genotypes at DIV21 (g). (h,i) Distribution of the
inhibitory postsynaptic scaffolding molecule gephyrin (red) on somata and
dendrites of neurons from both genotypes (co-labelling against MAP2, blue).
(j,k) Three-dimensional reconstructions from stacks of
confocal images as those shown in panel h,i. (l) Degree
of co-localization between synapsin-positive punctae with PSD-95 clusters
was increased in KO neurons as seen by an increased probability of
co-localization (synapsin/PSD-95). In contrast, the probability of
co-localization of synapsin with gephyrin was reduced (synapsin/gephyrin),
as quantitated on 44–47 dendrites from four independent cultures
per genotype. All data are means±s.e.m. ***P<0.001.
Scale bars, 5 μm in a, b, 500 nm in c,
d, 10 μm in h–i and 5
μm in j–k.
Quantitative comparison revealed that the number of PSD-95 clusters on spine
heads was lower in mutants (Nbea+/+: 4.48±0.28,
n=25 dendrites per 3 cultures;
Nbea−/−: 2.33±0.19,
n=29 dendrites per 3 cultures; P<0.0001), whereas their
presence on dendritic shafts was increased (Nbea+/+:
1.83±0.27, n=25 dendrites per 3 cultures;
Nbea−/−: 5.79±0.45,
n=29 dendrites per 3 cultures; P<0.0001) (Fig. 3e,f). Consequently, the ratio of spine/shaft synapses was
>1 in controls, but reduced to <1 in KOs (Fig.
3g). In contrast, stainings against gephyrin, a postsynaptic molecule
of inhibitory synapses (Fig. 3h,i), and their
reconstructions (Fig. 3j,k) were undistinguishable in both
genotypes, and the number of gephyrin-positive punctae on the shaft did not
differ significantly (Nbea+/+: 4.81±1.13, n=4
cultures per 47 dendrites; Nbea−/−:
3.11±1.06, n=4 cultures per 44 dendrites; P=0.1289).As the number of PSD-95-positive shaft synapses was increased we also determined
a 28% augmented total number of PSD-95-positive clusters in mutants
(Nbea+/+: 6.31±0.44, n=25 dendrites per 3
cultures; Nbea−/−: 8.12±0.57,
n=29 dendrites per 5 cultures; P=0.0180). To explore the
possibility that the increased number of PSD-95-clusters also indicated a shift
in the ratio of excitatory to inhibitory contacts, we determined the probability
of co-localization between synapsin-positive punctae and PSD-95-positive
clusters, and found that it markedly raised in knockouts (Fig.
3l), while the probability of co-localization with gephyrinwas
reduced (Fig. 3l). These data possibly suggest that
knockout neurons tried to compensate the loss of spine synapses by establishing
more excitatory synapses at the shaft and by lowering inhibitory inputs. Such a
compensation is consistent with the functional importance of spines4, but also mandated analysis of neurotransmission in these
cultures.
Nbea deletion reduces spontaneous minirelease
At synapses, different forms of neurotransmitter release are observed, for
example, evoked release and spontaneous 'minirelease' that may be
mechanistically distinct33. As previous studies demonstrated a
role of Nbea in evoked release but reported conflicting results on
minirelease2829, we probed its effect on miniature
excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic currents (mEPSC and mIPSC).First, we recorded mEPSCs from cultured neurons in presence of TTX and bicuculline (Fig. 4a,b). Consistent
with observations in foetal brainstem neurons28, we found that
interevent intervals were four times longer in mutants (Nbea+/+:
165±62 ms, n=15 cells per 3 cultures;
Nbea−/−: 718±154 ms,
n=16 cells per 3 cultures; P=0.0029) (Fig.
4b), indicating reduced presynaptic release. Mini amplitudes were
unchanged (Fig. 4b), in agreement with normal transmitter
quanta and similar postsynaptic signalling. We also observed a faster rise time
(Nbea+/+: 1.13±0.10 ms, n=15 cells per 3
cultures; Nbea−/−: 0.85±0.09 ms,
n=16 dendrites per 3 cultures; P=0.0375) and faster decay time
(Nbea+/+: 3.34±0.22 ms, n=15 cells per 3
cultures; Nbea−/−: 2.62±0.27 ms,
n=16 dendrites per 3 cultures; P=0.0462) of mEPSCs (Fig. 4b), possibly caused by postsynaptic modifications of
spines34 such as reported above.
Figure 4
Nbea deletion affects postsynaptic currents in cultured knockout neurons and
heterozygous brain slices.
(a) Representative continuous recordings of pharmacologically isolated
excitatory miniature postsynaptic currents (mEPSCs) from cultured
hippocampal neurons of wild-type (upper trace, +/+) and knockout (lower
trace, −/−) mice in presence of TTX (0.5 μM) and
bicuculline (5
μM). (b) For quantitative analysis of interevent intervals,
amplitudes, rise and decay times, data from 80–160 individual
mEPSCs were averaged per cell, and compared in 15–16 cells from
at least three animals per genotype. (c) Representative recordings of
inhibitory miniature postsynaptic currents (mIPSCs) from cultured neurons
were performed in the presence of TTX (0.5 μM) and CNQX (10 μM). (d)
Evaluation of mIPSCs included the same parameters as for mEPSCs (b).
(e–j) Exemplary continuous recordings
(e,h) and fitted current traces from 80 single events
(f,i) of isolated mEPSCs (e,f) and mIPSCs
(h,i) from acute brain slices of wild-type (+/+) and
heterozygous (+/−) Nbea mice. (g,j) Statistical
analysis of interevent intervals, amplitudes, rise and decay times for
mEPSCs (g) and mIPSCs (j) recorded from layer 5 pyramidal
neurons of the somatosensory cortex, and quantitatively compared in
14–19 cells from at least four animals per genotype. All data are
means±s.e.m. *P<0.05, **P<0.01 and
***P<0.001, NS, not significant.
In contrast, recordings of mIPSCs from cultured neurons in presence of
TTX and CNQX (Fig. 4c)
failed to detect differences in rise and decay times (Fig.
4d), consistent with their aspinous nature. The altered interevent
intervals and amplitudes of mIPSCs (Fig. 4d), in turn, are
in agreement with our earlier recordings in the brainstem28.To ensure specificity of these recorded defects, we next explored whether similar
impairments were present in adult heterozygous mice. Pharmacologically isolated
mEPSCs and mIPSCs were recorded from layer 5 pyramidal neurons, and fitted for
analysis (Fig. 4e,f,h and i). We found that the interevent
intervals of excitatory and inhibitory minis were increased significantly in
heterozygous mutants by about 42% (mEPSCs, Fig. 4g) and
61% (mIPSCs, Fig. 4j), respectively (mEPSCs:
Nbea+/+: 0.42 ±0.05s, n=15 cells per 4 mice;
Nbea+/−: 0.60 ±0.07s, n=19 cells
per 4 mice; P=0.038; mIPSC: Nbea+/+: 0.38 ±0.03s,
n=17 cells per 7 mice; Nbea+/−: 0.61
±0.08s, n=13 cells per 7 mice; P=0.005). These
differences are less pronounced compared with cultured neurons lacking both
alleles, but the rise time of mEPSCs was also faster in heterozygous animals
(Fig. 4g, third panel, Nbea+/+:
1.59±0.1ms, n=15 cells per 4 mice;
Nbea+/−: 1.32±0.07ms, n=19 cells
per 4 mice; P=0.032), demonstrating that the data from brain slices are
consistent with our observations in cultures.Although the charge transfer of excitatory and inhibitory input per time was
lower in mutants (Supplementary Fig.
S3), the overall relation of excitation to inhibition remained
remarkably stable (Supplementary Fig.
S3). Thus, our electrophysiological results support the notion that
excitatory/inhibitory balance is a critical parameter for neurons, and that the
changed ratio of morphologically identified PSD-95 versus gephyrin-positive
contacts (Fig. 3l) may reflect compensatory alterations
induced by the loss of spinous synapses.
Presynaptic and postsynaptic effects of Nbea
Reduced numbers of spines (Figs 1 and 2), altered postsynaptic organization (Fig.
3), and pre- and postsynaptic functional impairments (Fig.
4) are consistent with the idea that Nbea acts upstream in the
trafficking of synaptic components1028. As the actin
cytoskeleton has a critical role in modulating the function of pre- and
postsynaptic terminals535, we tested whether actin distribution
is altered in Nbea mutants.While wild-type neurons displayed synaptically enriched actin (Fig. 5a,c and e) as expected25, knockouts exhibited
a change in the subcellular distribution of actin (Fig. 5b,d and
f). Although actin could be found in some of the few mutant spines
(Fig. 5j), it mostly accumulated in large clusters in
the cell bodies, dendritic shafts and in axons (filled arrowheads in Fig. 5b,f and k). Controls showed most actin punctae at
spine synapses (open arrowheads in Fig. 5a,c and i).
Quantification of neurons containing accumulated actin (Fig.
5g) and measurement of the size of actin clusters (Fig. 5h) revealed significant increases in Nbea-deficient cultures
(cells with accumulated actin: Nbea+/+: 0.16±0.16%,
n=3 cultures; Nbea−/−:
15.22±0.86%, n=3 cultures; P<0.0001; actin cluster
size in Nbea+/+: 0.38±0.06 μm2,
n=1501 clusters per 3 cultures;
Nbea−/−: 0.62±0.0.06
μm2, n=3040 clusters per 3 cultures;
P=0.0168). Correspondingly, we observed a larger number of cortical
neurons with prominent actin immunoreactivity over their somata in heterozygous
Nbeamice (Supplementary Fig. S4),
albeit this difference was less pronounced than in cultures. Moreover,
quantitative immunoblots of heterozygous brain tissue revealed a significant 21%
reduction of actin protein (Fig. 5l; P=0.0206),
suggesting that the retention of filaments negatively regulated expression.
Figure 5
Distribution of actin depends on Nbea.
(a,b) Overview of representative images of hippocampal neurons
from Nbea wild-type (+/+) and KO (−/−) cultures at
DIV21 incubated with fluorochrome-labelled phalloidin (green). Large clusters
of F-actin are seen in the somata and soma-near neurites of mutant neurons
(filled arrowheads), whereas control cells show mostly a punctate-like
distribution of actin along the dendrites (open arrowheads).
(c,d) High magnification images show spine-bearing
dendrites. Open arrowheads point to actin labelling in spines, filled
arrowheads point to actin signals on the dendritic shaft.
(e,f) Co-labelling with MAP2 (blue) to distinguish between
dendritic (MAP2-positive) and axonal (MAP2-negative) processes. Wild-type
axons contain only discrete actin staining (e, open arrowhead), while
F-actin accumulated in large clusters of knockout axons (f, filled
arrowhead). (g,h) Quantitative analysis of the percentage of
neurons containing multiple F-actin clusters in the cell body (g),
and the average size of 1,500–3,000 F-actin clusters in cells
(h) of three independent cultures of wild-type (+/+) and knockout
(−/−) mice at DIV21. (i–k)
Immunocytochemistry of spine-bearing dendrites from Nbea wild-type (+/+) and
KO (−/−) neurons at DIV21 incubated with phalloidin (green) and
counterstained against synapsin (red) and MAP2 (blue). Open arrowheads point
to actin-enriched spines and filled arrowheads to actin clusters in
dendritic shafts. (l) Representative immunoblots of brain lysates
from adult wild-type and heterozygous littermate mice loaded in triplicates,
and quantification of different synaptic proteins normalized to tubulin. All
data are means±s.e.m. *P<0.05,
***P<0.0001 and NS, =not significant. Scale bars, 20
μm in a, b, 5 μm in
c–f and 5 μm in
i–k.
To explore if Nbea affected actin-dependent trafficking of postsynaptic proteins,
we finally investigated the distribution of synaptopodin, a spine-associated
protein36 with actin-bundling activity37.
Whereas its protein levels appeared unchanged (Fig. 5l),
synaptopodin accumulated in large clusters in cell bodies of Nbea-deficient
neurons (arrowhead in Fig. 6b; wild-type cell bodies do
not contain synaptopodin36, Fig. 6a).
Although presence of classical spine apparatus in cultured neurons is
controversial30, we saw prominent synaptopodin staining at
dendritic spines of wild-type neurons (open arrowheads in Fig.
6c), consistent with earlier reports32. In mutant
dendrites, however, synaptopodin primarily occurred in clusters within the shaft
(filled arrowheads in Fig. 6d). Supporting the additional
presence of synaptopodin in cisternal organelles of the axonal initial
segment38, we observed discrete synaptopodin-positive punctae
in axons of controls (Fig. 6e). Knockout axons, however,
contained large clusters of accumulated synaptopodin (Fig.
6f).
Figure 6
Deletion of Nbea leads to mislocalization of the actin-associated protein
synaptopodin.
(a,b) Somata of wild-type (+/+) and Nbea-deficient
(−/−) hippocampal neurons at DIV21 stained against
synaptopodin (green, filled arrowhead points to perinuclear clusters of
synaptopodin only seen in knockouts). (c,d) Wild-type and
mutant dendrites are double labelled against synaptopodin (green) and MAP2
(blue). Synaptopodin immunoreactivity is mostly seen associated with spines
of wild-type dendrites (c, open arrowheads), but concentrated in the
dendritic shaft in knockout neurons (d, filled arrowheads).
(e,f) In Nbea-deficient neurons, enriched synaptopodin
clusters also occur in soma-near segments of axonal processes (f,
filled arrowhead), while only small axonal punctae are seen in control axons
(e, open arrowhead). Axons were identified by absence of MAP2 and
co-labelling with calnexin (red). (g,h) Co-staining of
wild-type (g,g′,g′′)
and Nbea knockout
(h,h′,h′′) neurons
with Alexa488-phalloidin
(g′,h′, green) and antibodies against
synaptopodin (g, h, red) and MAP2 (blue in the merged images)
shows almost complete overlap of actin and synaptopodin that are retained in
clusters in the somata and soma-near processes of KO neurons (filled
arrowheads in h, h′,
h′′). (i–l)
Postembedding immunogold labelling of synaptopodin directly at the spine
apparatus (filled arrowheads) and at spine-near dendritic locations (open
arrowheads) in neocortical tissue of wild-type (i,k, +/+) and
Nbea heterozygous (j,l, +/−) mice. Scale bars, 10
μm in a–h, 500 nm in
i–j and 250 nm in k,l.
As the pattern of accumulated actin and synaptopodin looked similar, we next
performed double-labelling experiments: cell bodies from controls did not show
relevant staining for the two proteins (Fig. 6g), but
Nbea-deficient neurons revealed an almost complete overlap of actin and
synaptopodin clusters (Fig. 6h). This indicates that the
proposed actin association of synaptopodin might not only be important in renal
podocytes37 but also in neurons32. Therefore,
we performed postembedding immunogold labelling of synaptopodin in neocortical
tissue of wild-type and Nbea heterozygous (Fig.
6i–l) animals. We observed that in addition to the
previously described association with the spine apparatus (filled arrowheads,
Fig. 6i,j; refs 36,39), synaptopodin is also present
at numerous other dendritic locations (open arrowheads, Fig.
6i–l). This raises the possibility that Nbea has a more
general role in regulating the F-actin network at synapses.As Nbea is localized to the trans-Golgi network10 and the
perinuclear pattern of accumulated synaptopodin and actin in mutants is
reminiscent of a Golgi-near localization (Figs 5 and 6), we finally addressed their spatial relation in cultures.
We first confirmed by co-labelling of Nbea with the marker proteins GM130 (Fig. 7a) and syntaxin 6 (data not shown) that Nbea is
present in tubulovesicular organelles adjacent to the Golgi apparatus in
controls, and that the Golgi was still present in knockouts (Fig.
7b). Co-labelling of synaptopodin with the same proteins revealed
that the perinuclear accumulation of synaptopodin in Nbea mutants is spatially
close to but not overlapping with the Golgi (Fig. 7d). The
same staining in controls confirmed absence of synaptopodin from somata (Fig. 7c). Accordingly, co-labelling of actin with the marker
protein GM130 in control (Fig. 7e) and mutants (Fig. 7f) resembled closely the synaptopodin/GM130
distribution (Fig. 7c,d). As the distribution of
synaptopodin/GM130 and actin/GM130 in cell bodies of knockouts was similar to
the Nbea/GM130 localization in controls, their respective pathways may intersect
in the trans-Golgi compartment. These data provide the first mechanistic
cues how Nbea may affect trafficking of synaptic components, and why pre- and
postsynaptic defects are observed in Nbea-mutant mice.
Figure 7
Synaptopodin and actin are retained near the trans-Golgi network in
Nbea-mutant neurons.
(a) In wild-type (+/+) hippocampal neurons at DIV21, a large amount of
Nbea (green) is localized near the trans-Golgi network revealed by
the marker protein GM130 (red). Additional co-labelling against MAP2 (blue)
identifies dendrites and somata. (b) Control experiment showing
co-staining with the same antibodies in Nbea-deficient
(−/−) hippocampal neurons. (c) Co-labelling of
synaptopodin (green) with GM130 (red) and MAP2 (blue) fails to detect
visible amounts of synaptopodin in somata of wild-type neurons. (d)
In contrast, deletion of Nbea leads to ectopic accumulation of prominent
clusters of synaptopodin (filled arrowheads) in the cell body near the
trans-Golgi network. (e,f) Co-labelling of actin
(green) with GM130 (red) and MAP2 (blue) reveals a comparable pattern to the
synaptopodin/GM130 distribution (c, d), showing ectopic accumulation of
actin clusters in the cell body of Nbea-deficient neurons (f, filled
arrowheads). Scale bars, 10 μm in
a–f.
Discussion
The phenotype of Nbea deficiency in mature neurons demonstrated here consists of an
impaired development and function of spinous synapses (Figs
1,2 and 4), a concomitant
shift of PSD-95 clusters to the dendritic shaft (Fig. 3) and
an ectopic accumulation of F-actin and synaptopodin (Figs
5,6,7). These results were
surprising because previous analyses in foetal mice emphasized presynaptic
defects2829.As spinous synapses are scarce before birth in altricial animals40 and
NMJs lack a neuronal postsynaptic partner, however, the effect on spinous synapses
could not be detected by the earlier studies. Nevertheless, Medrihan et
al.28 reported a slight decrease in mini amplitudes, which
pointed to additional postsynaptic impairments. Our current data derived from two
standard models for studying synaptic function confirm the postsynaptic effect on
peak amplitudes of mini events. In addition, we found shorter rise times of mEPSCs
in mutants (Fig. 4), which are indicative of shorter spines or
aspinous neurons3034. Changes in miniature postsynaptic current
(mPSC) kinetics were not observed earlier28, again consistent with
the lack of spinous synapses in the foetal brainstem.While all investigations agree that Nbea is not required for the establishment of
synapses in general, our previous study reported a reduced area density of
asymmetric synapses in brainstem28, whereas we show here a specific
reduction of spinous synapses with unchanged total numbers of asymmetric contacts
(Figs 1 and 2). These results could
be explained by a more dramatic delay of synaptogenesis in homozygous compared with
heterozygous mice (Fig. 2). Such view is supported by
diminished levels of a subset of presynaptic vesicle proteins in foetal
Nbea−/− brainstem28, which
is not detected in adult heterozygous brains (Fig. 5). One
possible interpretation holds that reduced levels of Nbea predominantly affect
postsynaptic processes such as spine development, whereas complete lack prevents
formation of many contacts by interfering additionally with presynaptic
processes.Alternatively, the results might reflect a specific delay in synapse development in
the brainstem that is compensated in higher brain regions (neocortex, Fig. 2), for example, by overlapping expression with related
proteins4142. Such view is supported by analysis of cultured
hippocampal knockout neurons that reproduced the effect on spinous synapses (Fig. 1) and the electrophysiologically observed impairments
(Fig. 4). However, all currently available data together
convincingly agree that Nbea has important roles in pre- and postsynaptic
processes.The pre- and postsynaptic effects of deleting Nbea in mice indicate that the
pleiotropic phenotype is in agreement with a function in the trafficking of pre- and
postsynaptic components1028, but its immediate targets remain
unclear. We demonstrate that loss of Nbea interferes with the normal distribution of
F-actin at synapses (Fig. 5), an important result because
actin is the major cytoskeletal component of presynaptic terminals and dendritic
spines2434445. Numerous studies showed that actin has a
pivotal role in the formation, shape and motility of dendritic spines544. In addition, modulation of actin dynamics drives changes in
spines that are associated with alterations in synaptic strength124. Finally, actin is involved in organizing the postsynaptic density, anchoring
postsynaptic receptors, facilitating the trafficking of synaptic cargos and
localizing the translation machinery54344.As our finding that Nbea might act on the actin filament organization was unexpected,
we reassessed its molecular architecture (Supplementary Fig. S5). Interestingly, two additional WD repeats may be
present in Nbea that possibly allow to assign a propeller structure. Many
actin-binding proteins such as Arp2/3 complex (p40) and coronins contain such
propeller domains and localize to dendritic spines where they organize the actin
network434647, raising the possibility that Nbea also binds
to or regulates the assembly of F-actin.If Nbeawas involed in initiation or maintenance of F-actin at synapses, deletion
could cause destabilization of the actin network and lower numbers of dendritic
spines43. Such a role is further supported by our observation
that Nbea is responsible for a normal distribution of synaptopodin, an actin- and
α-actinin-associated protein involved in the RhoA pathway37484950, because it co-localized with ectopically accumulated
F-actin in KO neurons (Figs 6 and 7).
Previously, a possible interaction between the plant BEACH protein SPIRRIG and the
actin cytoskeleton was only inferred from phenotype similarities with mutants of the
ARP2/3 complex51.Synaptopodinwas characterized as an essential component of the spine apparatus39, and functionally linked to synaptic plasticity3236. As deletion of synaptopodin resulted into a lack of spine apparatuses but not of
spines themselves36, it can be hypothesized that the effect of Nbea
on synaptopodin is secondary to its effect on actin. One possibility is that actin
filaments normally serve as a template for synaptopodin at dendritic spines374849, whereas in Nbea mutants, synaptopodin simply associates
with the actin ectopically retained in somata and processes (Fig.
6). The effect of Nbea on actin most likely starts at the level of the
trans-Golgi network because actin and synaptopodin accumulate in
Nbea-mutant neurons at a location where Nbea is normally present (Fig. 7, and ref. 10). The link to the actin
cytoskeleton together with its ability to associate with Golgi-near
endomembranes10 provides new evidence that Nbea has a role in
trafficking of proteins and membranous organelles to both pre- and postsynaptic
compartments. Such a role was also demonstrated for a related BEACH protein, BCHS,
in Drosophila52, and normal growth and morphological
plasticity of spines are predicted to depend on Golgi-derived cargo organelles and
endosomal membrane trafficking5354.In recent years, it has become evident that many psychiatric and neurological
disorders are accompanied by alterations in spines678, and
various memory disorders involve defects in the regulation of actin43. Human genetic studies have linked heterozygous disruptions of the Nbea
gene to idiopathic cases of non-familial autism18192021, and
defects in spinous synapses are found in mouse models of other autism candidate
molecules. For example, mutations in the postsynaptic protein Shank3 revealed
reductions in spine density and mEPSCs55, reminiscent of the changes
seen here. Importantly, our present study shows for the first time a morphological
and electrophysiological phenotype of Nbea-haploinsufficient neurons. Even moderate
alterations of Nbea abundance or activity have consequences at the cellular level,
which may then manifest at the organismic level in disorders such as autism.
Methods
Primary neurons
All experiments involving mice were performed in accordance with local
institutional and government regulation for animal welfare. Cultures were
prepared from individual hippocampi of wild-type and Nbea KO mouse embryos
(E17), digested with 0.25% trypsin and triturated mechanically. Neurons were
seeded onto poly-L-lysin-coated coverslips at low density
(50–100 cells mm−2), and placed upside down
above a layer of astrocytes containing N2.1 medium56. Neurons
were transfected with pMH4-SYNtdimer2-RFP (T. Oertner, Basel, Switzerland) on
DIV4 by calcium phosphate
transfection57. Immunocytochemistry: neurons were fixed with
4% paraformaldehyde/4% sucrose
for 10 min, washed with PBS and permeabilized with 0.3% Triton-X100/PBS for 10
min. After blocking in 5% normal goat serum (NGS)/PBS for 30 min, incubation
with primary antibodies followed overnight at 4 °C: rb-anti-pan-synapsin (1:500, E028, T.
Südhof, Stanford University), ms-anti-synapsin (1:500), ms-anti-PSD-95
(1:500), ch-anti-MAP2 (1:10,000), ms-anti-calnexin (1:1,000, all from Abcam), ms-anti-vGlut1 (1:500), rb-anti-vGlut2 (1:500), ms-anti-gephyrin
(1:500), rb-anti-neurobeachin (1:1,000, all from Synaptic
Systems), ms-anti-syntaxin6
(1:500), ms-anti-GM130 (1:1,000, both from BD Transduction
Laboratories), diluted in 5% NGS/PBS. Rabbit-anti-synaptopodin (Sigma)
was applied according to ref. 32. After washing,
cells were incubated with secondary antibodies Alexa488goat-anti-rabbit, Alexa488goat-anti-mouseIgG, Alexa647goat-anti-chickenIgG (Invitrogen), Cy3-conjugated goat-anti-rabbit,
goat-anti-mouseIgG (Jackson Immuno Research), all
diluted 1:500 in 5% NGS/PBS for 1 h at RT. To visualize F-actin, cells were
incubated with Alexa-Fluor488-Phalloidin
(1:100, Invitrogen) for 1 h at RT. After final
washes, coverslips were embedded in mounting
medium (Dako). Quantitative image
analysis: cultures were observed with an Axioskop2 using a 40× Plan
Neofluar or 63× Axoplan oil immersion objective, and an AxioCam MRm digital camera (Zeiss). The number of immunoreactive punctae was
determined per 10 μm dendrite length. The number of overlapping
presynaptic and postsynaptic punctae was quantified, and the probability of
co-localization was calculated58 as: [(number of juxtaposed
punctae)2/(number of presynaptic punctae×number of
postsynaptic punctae)]. The number of neurons with actin accumulations was
determined with >300 cells per coverslip and is given as % of the total
cell number. To determine the cluster size of actin signals, images were
thresholded manually and analysed using the 'analyse particles' function of
ImageJ software (NIH). Confocal imaging of dendritic spineswas carried out with a
laser scanning microscope (Leica SP2) and 63× oil immersion objective to
take image stacks of 0.2 μm distance. Spine dimensions were determined
in maximum projections using ImageJ. Two-dimensional maximum projections were
imported into Imaris software (Bitplane), and three-dimensional surface-rendered
images were reconstructed using the FilamentTracer function. All figures were
prepared with Adobe Illustrator software. Scale bars given on all figures are
identical for the respective pairs of images from control and mutant
samples.
Light microscopy of mouse brains
Anesthetized adult mice were perfusion-fixed with 70 ml of 4% paraformaldehyde in
0.1 M PB (37 °C) and postfixed for 1 h at RT. After dissection, brains
were cryoprotected in 25% sucrose/0.1 M PB overnight. Immunhistochemistry: 30
μm free-floating cryosections were treated with 1% Triton X-100 for 15
min and blocked with 50% NGS/PBS at 4 °C overnight, followed by primary
antibody labelling with rb-anti-neurobeachin (1:500, SynapticSystems) or rb-anti-actin (1:100, Sigma) in buffer
(0.1% Triton X-100, 50% NGS in PBS) at 37 °C for 4 h. Secondary
antibody goat-anti-rabbit (1:100,
Covance) was applied in buffer for 30 min at
37 °C, followed by rb-PAP
(1:400, Sternberger) for 1 h at 37 °C.
Visualization was done with diaminobenzidine (0.05% w/v), H2O2 (0.005% v/v)
and NiCl2 (0.15%
w/v). Stained sections were mounted with 0.5% gelatine, and embedded with
Entellan. Nissl staining with 0.1% cresylviolet is described in Supplementary Methods. Image acquisition:
stainings were documented with an Axioskop2 microscope and a digital camera
AxioCam MRm, using a 20× objective for grey value analysis, and for
quantifications of cells. A 63× oil immersion objective was used for
high magnification images. The mean grey value was determined using the
'histogram analysis' of ImageJ.
Electron microscopy
Brains from mice and neuronal cultures were embedded in epon resin (Electron Microscopy
Science). Brain tissue: anesthetized mice were transcardially
perfused with 70 ml of 2% glutaraldehyde (Serva) and 2%
paraformaldehyde (Merck) in 0.1 M PB at
37 °C, and postfixed at 4 °C overnight. Blocks of cortical
tissue were contrasted in 1% OsO4 for 2 h at RT. Following washes with
dH2O and dehydrating, tissue was incubated with propylene
oxide (EMS) for 45
min, infiltrated with propylene
oxide/epon (1:1) for 1 h, in pure epon overnight, and
hardened at 60 °C for 24 h. Neuronal cultures: embedding of neurons on
coverslips followed the same protocol as for brains, applying reduced incubation
times. Glass coverslips were finally placed on epon-filled moulds, and after
hardening, removed by dipping in boiling water and liquid nitrogen. Contrasting
of thin sections from brains and cultures was done on Formvar-coated copper
grids with a saturated solution of 12% uranyl
acetate and lead
citrate. Immunogold labelling: staining steps were carried
out on Formvar-coated gold grids in a humidified atmosphere. Ultrathin sections
from brain tissue were etched with 10% periodic acid and 10% sodium meta-periodate for 14 min each, and placed on
droplets of blocking solution (0.5 M glycine in TBS) for 15 min, followed by drops of 20% NGS in
TBS for 20 min. Tissue sections were incubated with rb-anti-synaptopodin (1:50, Sigma) in 10% NGS/TBS at 37 °C for 3 h. After washes on
20% NGS/TBS and EMIX (0.9% NaCl, 0.1% BSA in 0.05 M TB), a 10-nm gold-conjugated
secondary goat-anti-rabbit antibody
(1:10, EMS) was applied at RT for 2 h. Following
washes in EMIX and dH2O, sections were contrasted with uranyl and
lead citrate.
Ultrastructural analysis: samples were investigated with a transmission electron
microscope (Libra 120, Zeiss) at 80 kV, and images taken with a 2048×2048 CCD camera (Tröndle). For brain tissue, two image series
from the somatosensory cortex of each animal were examined at 5000×
primary magnification. Each series included images from all cortical layers, and
was composed of about 17 multiple image alignment (MIA) pictures. Each MIA
picture, in turn, was assembled from four adjacent images, representing an area
of 100 μm2. MIA composition and analysis were carried
out with ITEM software (Olympus Soft Imaging Solutions). Synapse morphology:
asymmetric (type 1) synapses were defined as contacts with a visible synaptic
cleft, a distinct postsynaptic density (PSD) and at least three synaptic
vesicles, whereas symmetric (type 2) contacts showed an inapparent PSD and
contained pleiomorphic vesicles. Axo-spinous contacts were identified as small
dendritic protrusions (maximum length 1 μm) with a visible PSD opposed
to a presynaptic terminal. Three synaptic populations were quantified as area
densities: number of total asymmetric and symmetric synapses, and number of
axo-spinous contacts. In addition, one randomly chosen synapse was analysed on
each MIA picture at a higher zoom level (200%) to quantify the presynaptic
terminal area, number of synaptic vesicles per terminal area and length of the
PSD. Synaptic cleft widthwas determined from three synapses per MIA by six
repeated measurements.
Electrophysiological recordings
Whole-cell patch clamp recordings were performed on cultured hippocampal neurons
(DIV17-20), and on layer 5 pyramidal cells in acute slices from the
somatosensory cortex of mice (P14-P16). mPSCs were measured under 500 nM tetrodotoxin (TTX, Tocris) in combination
with either 5 μM 1(S),9(R)-(–)-Bicuculline
methiodide (Bicuculline, Sigma) for pharmacologically isolated excitatory
recordings, or 10 μM 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX, Sigma) for
inhibitory recordings. Data acquisition and analysis was performed using Patchmaster V2X42 and Fitmaster V2X32
software (HEKA), MiniAnalysis (Synaptosoft) and
Microsoft Excel. For each cell, the amplitude, rise time (10–90%),
decay time (time constant of a monoexponential fit) and the interevent interval
of at least 80 individual mPSCs were determined (Supplementary Methods).
Biochemical analysis
Forebrains of embryonic (E17) and adult mice were homogenized as described
previously28. Lysates were separated by 10% SDS-PAGE and
4–15% precast gradient gels
(Biorad). Nitrocellulose blots (GE Healthcare)
were probed with the following antibodies: rb-anti-neurobeachin (1:5,000, Synaptic
Systems), a new rb-anti-Nbea antibody produced against peptide YNRWRNSEIRC (3041,
1:1,000, Eurogentec), ms-anti-synaptophysin (1:1,000, DAKO), ms-anti-synapsin1a/b (1:10,000, Synaptic
Systems), rb-anti-synaptopodin (1:2,000, Sigma),
rb-anti-actin (1:500, Sigma), ms-anti-neuroligin1 (1:1,000, Synaptic
Systems), rb-anti-neuroligin2 (1:5,000, Synaptic
Systems), rb-anti-tubulin
(1:20,000, Sigma), followed by HRP-coupled
secondary antibodies (goat-anti-mouse/rabbitIgG, Biorad, 1:20,000). Proteins were
visualized using a chemiluminescence kit
(Millipore), and DC Science Tec detection system (DC
Science Tec). Intensities of immunolabelled bands were quantified
and normalized against tubulin using the 'GelAnalyzer function' of ImageJ.
Statistical analysis
Data are presented as means±s.e.m. Statistical significance was tested
with a two-tailed Student's t-test using Prism software (GraphPad Software),
assuming Gaussian distribution. Results were denoted statistically significant
when P-values were <0.05 (significance levels as indicated in
figure legends). Exact P-values and the number (n) of
samples/repeats are given in the Results and figure legends of the respective
experiments.
Author contributions
K.N., D.B., J.B., G.B., I.W., C.R. and A.R. collected and analysed data, and
critiqued the manuscript. M.W.K. provided the neurobeachin knockout mouse line.
K.N., A.R. and M.M. conceived and directed the project, and M.M. wrote the
manuscript.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Niesmann, K. et al. Dendritic spine formation
and synaptic function require neurobeachin. Nat. Commun. 2:557 doi:
10.1038/ncomms1565 (2011).
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