| Literature DB >> 24584052 |
Ulrike Pannasch1, Dominik Freche2, Glenn Dallérac1, Grégory Ghézali3, Carole Escartin4, Pascal Ezan3, Martine Cohen-Salmon3, Karim Benchenane5, Veronica Abudara1, Amandine Dufour6, Joachim H R Lübke7, Nicole Déglon8, Graham Knott9, David Holcman10, Nathalie Rouach3.
Abstract
Astrocytes play active roles in brain physiology by dynamic interactions with neurons. Connexin 30, one of the two main astroglial gap-junction subunits, is thought to be involved in behavioral and basic cognitive processes. However, the underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms are unknown. We show here in mice that connexin 30 controls hippocampal excitatory synaptic transmission through modulation of astroglial glutamate transport, which directly alters synaptic glutamate levels. Unexpectedly, we found that connexin 30 regulated cell adhesion and migration and that connexin 30 modulation of glutamate transport, occurring independently of its channel function, was mediated by morphological changes controlling insertion of astroglial processes into synaptic clefts. By setting excitatory synaptic strength, connexin 30 plays an important role in long-term synaptic plasticity and in hippocampus-based contextual memory. Taken together, these results establish connexin 30 as a critical regulator of synaptic strength by controlling the synaptic location of astroglial processes.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24584052 DOI: 10.1038/nn.3662
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Neurosci ISSN: 1097-6256 Impact factor: 24.884