| Literature DB >> 25368556 |
Aaron D Levy1, Mitchell H Omar1, Anthony J Koleske2.
Abstract
Dendritic spines are the receptive contacts at most excitatory synapses in the central nervous system. Spines are dynamic in the developing brain, changing shape as they mature as well as appearing and disappearing as they make and break connections. Spines become much more stable in adulthood, and spine structure must be actively maintained to support established circuit function. At the same time, adult spines must retain some plasticity so their structure can be modified by activity and experience. As such, the regulation of spine stability and remodeling in the adult animal is critical for normal function, and disruption of these processes is associated with a variety of late onset diseases including schizophrenia and Alzheimer's disease. The extracellular matrix (ECM), composed of a meshwork of proteins and proteoglycans, is a critical regulator of spine and synapse stability and plasticity. While the role of ECM receptors in spine regulation has been extensively studied, considerably less research has focused directly on the role of specific ECM ligands. Here, we review the evidence for a role of several brain ECM ligands and remodeling proteases in the regulation of dendritic spine and synapse formation, plasticity, and stability in adults.Entities:
Keywords: RGD peptide; agrin; chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans; dendritic spine; extracellular matrix; extracellular proteases; integrins; reelin
Year: 2014 PMID: 25368556 PMCID: PMC4202714 DOI: 10.3389/fnana.2014.00116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neuroanat ISSN: 1662-5129 Impact factor: 3.856
Figure 1Dendritic spines are highly structured and plastic synaptic specializations. (A) Schematic of a dendritic spine apposed to a presynaptic terminal. The spine head and neck are supported by a network of filamentous (F)-actin. Postsynaptic cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) connect to the postsynaptic density (PSD) and F-actin in the spine, and extend from the spine to associate with CAMs on the presynaptic terminal. Perisynapic and putative synaptic cleft extracellular matrix (ECM) may interact with multiple CAMs and other cell surface receptors. (B) Spine structural changes accompany synaptic plasticity, with long-term potentiation (LTP) increasing spine head size and long-term depression (LTD) decreasing head size. (C) Mouse hippocampal CA1 neuron spine head sizes were obtained from electron microscopy of the stratum radiatum. Spine head size and its variance decrease as animals mature from P21 (juvenile) to P42 (adult). Figure modified with permission from Kerrisk et al. (2013). (D) Spine motility, defined as changes in spine length over time, is high in juvenile animals. By contrast, spines from adult animals are relatively immotile.
Figure 2Mechanisms of spine stabilization and remodeling by extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. Extracellular matrix components can stabilize and remodel dendritic spines by a variety of different mechanisms. Structural restriction: ECM components such as chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs) can form a matrix around dendritic spines to provide extracellular rigidity and physically restrict spine motion. Adhesion: classical ECM proteins such as fibronectin and RGD-containing proteins can act as adhesion substrates and bind to integrin adhesion receptors to remodel spines. Ligand/receptor-driven intracellular signaling: ECM proteins like reelin function as ligands for non-adhesion receptors to drive intracellular signaling cascades that regulate spine remodeling and formation. Epitope unmasking by proteases: extracellular proteases such as tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) and the matrix metalloproteinase (MMPs) can cleave ECM proteins to reveal cryptic ligands that drive intracellular signaling to change spine morphology.
Figure 3Chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans around spines restrict spine dynamics and functional plasticity. (A) In juvenile animals during the critical period, CSPG expression is low and visual monocular deprivation (MD) can increase spine motility in primary visual cortex and drive changes in ocular dominance (OD) plasticity. (B) In adult animals after the critical period, CSPG expression is high and MD can no longer increase spine motility or drive OD plasticity. However, treatment with chondroitinaseABC (chABC) to degrade CSPG glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains allows MD to once again increase spine motility and drive OD plasticity in adults, demonstrating that CSPGs restrict spine remodeling and functional plasticity in adult animals.
Figure 4Agrin cleavage by neurotrypsin plays an important role in filopodia formation following LTP. In wild type animals after an LTP stimulus, agrin is cleaved by neurotrypsin (top left) and the agrin fragment promotes growth of new dendritic filopodia (top right). In neurotrypsin knockout mice, agrin cannot be cleaved (bottom left) and new filopodia are not formed in response to an LTP-inducing stimulus (bottom right). However, application of a soluble recombinant neurotrypsin-dependent agrin cleavage fragment rescues this phenotype, promoting new filopodia growth after LTP even in neurotrypsin knockout hippocampal slices. See Matsumoto-Miyai et al. (2009).
Figure 5Matrix metalloproteinases play diverse roles in dendritic spine remodeling in disease, development, and plasticity. (A) In Fragile X syndrome (FXS), MMP9 is hyperactive and dendritic spines are elongated early in development. MMP9 loss of function or inhibition with minocycline normalizes these spine defects. In epilepsy models, seizure-induced spine loss is blocked by inhibition of MMP activity. (B) In development, activation of MMPs, particularly MMP9, causes spine thinning and elongation, while MMP inhibition promotes the maturation of filopodia into mature, mushroom shaped spines. (C) Matrix metalloproteinases play a different role in adult plasticity, cleaving unknown ECM proteins to reveal cryptic integrin ligands that drive spine enlargement during LTP. In addition to changes in spine size, MMP activity is required for the maintenance phase of LTP.
Role(s) of ECM proteins in synaptic plasticity and/or regulation of spine structure.
| ECM molecule | Role(s) in synaptic plasticity and/or regulation of spine structure | Evidence for role | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| CSPGs | Inhibit adult MD-induced OD plasticity | Degradation of CSPG GAG chains by treatment with chABC permits MD-induced OD plasticity after CP closure in adults. | Pizzorusso et al. ( |
| Inhibit adult fear memory erasure | Treatment with chABC permits fear memory erasure after CP closure in adults. | Gogolla et al. ( | |
| Required for LTP maintenance | Adult neurocan and brevican knockouts have deficits in LTP maintenance. | Zhou et al. ( | |
| Inhibit recovery of spine loss due to adult MD | Treatment with chABC allows spine density to recover in adults after MD when the opposite eyelid has been resutured. | Pizzorusso et al. ( | |
| Inhibit spine motility | Treatment with chABC increases spine motility. | Orlando et al. ( | |
| RGD peptides | Inhibit LTP maintenance | RGD application to slices or cultured neurons inhibits the late phase of LTP. | Staubli et al. ( |
| Potentiate NMDA receptors | RGD application increases NMDAR-mediated currents. | Lin et al. ( | |
| Increase spine length and promote filopodia formation | RGD application elongates existing spines and induces dendritic filopodia formation. | Shi and Ethell ( | |
| Reelin | Enhances LTP | Recombinant reelin enhances LTP magnitude. | Beffert et al. ( |
| Promotes glutamatergic transmission | Recombinant reelin increases NMDAR and AMPAR currents. | Chen et al. ( | |
| Increases spine density | Spine density is reduced in | Liu et al. ( | |
| Increases spine head size and promotes multi-synapse spines | Recombinant reelin drives these phenotypes. | Pujadas et al. ( | |
| Agrin | Promotes filopodia formation | Filopodia formation is promoted by agrin clustering or overexpression and reduced by agrin knockdown. | Annies et al. ( |
| Increases spine density | Spine density is reduced in | Ksiazek et al. ( | |
| Required for LTP-induced filopodia formation | LTP-induced filopodia formation is blocked in | Matsumoto-Miyai et al. ( | |
| Tenascins | TNR is required for LTP | LTP is impaired in | Bukalo et al. ( |
| TNR promotes basal transmission | Basal excitatory transmission is increased in | Saghatelyan et al. ( | |
| TNR required for olfactory bulb granule cell spine density | Spine density of newborn olfactory bulb granule cells is decreased in | David et al. ( | |
| TNC is required for LTP and LTD | LTP and LTD are impaired in | Evers et al. ( | |
| TNC is required for proper spine distribution along dendrites | Cortical dendritic spines are shifted toward higher order dendrites in | Irintchev et al. ( | |
| Laminin | Protects against excitotoxicty | Disrupting laminin resensitizes excitotoxic-insensitive neurons. | Chen and Strickland ( |
| May stabilize LTP | Laminin degradation and loss of LTP are correlated. | Nakagami et al. ( | |
| May be required for synaptic structure | β2 laminin is required for synapse alignment and PSD length. | Egles et al. ( | |
| Netrin | May be required for LTP | LTP is impaired in | Horn et al. ( |
| May inhibit spine growth | Spine heads are smaller in | Horn et al. ( | |
| tPA | Stabilizes LTP late phase | Late LTP is destabilized in | Huang et al. ( |
| Required for OD plasticity | OD plasticity is blocked in | Mataga et al. ( | |
| Increases spine motility | Spine motility is upregulated by recombinant tPA. | Oray et al. ( | |
| Required for MD-induced spine pruning | Spine pruning caused by MD does not occur in | Mataga et al. ( | |
| Require for stress-induced spine loss | Spine loss caused by stress is blocked in | Pawlak et al. ( | |
| MMPs | Required for kainate-induced spine loss | Spine loss is blocked in | Wilczynski et al. ( |
| Required for FXS phenotypes | MMP9 inhibition or deletion rescues spine and behavioral phenotypes in FXS model mice | Bilousova et al. ( | |
| Promote spine elongation | Spine elongation is promoted by MMP activation and blocked by MMP inhibition in young systems. | Bilousova et al. ( | |
| Regulate ICAM5 cleavage and function | ICAM5 inhibits spine maturation, and MMPs are required for ICAM5 cleavage to promote spine elongation. | Tian et al. ( | |
| Required for LTP late phase | LTP late phase is lost in | Nagy et al. ( | |
| Required for spatial learning | Morris water maze acquisition is blocked by MMP inhibition. | Meighan et al. ( | |
| Promote LTP-induced spine volume increase | LTP-induced spine volume increase is blocked by MMP inhibition and promoted by local MMP application. | Wang et al. ( |
Abbreviations: CSPG-chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans; GAG chains-glycosaminoglycan side chains; MD-monocular deprivation; OD-ocular dominance; LTP-long term potentiation; LTD-long term depression; chABC-chondroitinase ABC; CP-critical period; RGD peptide-Arginine-Glycine-Aspartate peptide; DCC-deleted in colorectal cancer (netrin receptor); tPA-tissue plasminogen activator; TNR/C-tenascin R or C; MMP-matrix metalloproteinase; FXS-Fragile X syndrome.