Literature DB >> 29691328

Genetic Ablation of All Cerebellins Reveals Synapse Organizer Functions in Multiple Regions Throughout the Brain.

Erica Seigneur1, Thomas C Südhof2.   

Abstract

Cerebellins are synaptic organizer molecules that bind to presynaptic neurexins and postsynaptic receptors. They are well studied in the cerebellum, but three of the four cerebellins (Cbln1, Cbln2, and Cbln4) are also broadly expressed outside of the cerebellum, suggesting that they perform general functions throughout the brain. Here, we generated male and female constitutive single (KO), double KO (dKO), and triple KO (tKO) mice of Cbln1, Cbln2, and Cbln4. We found that all constitutive cerebellin-deficient mice were viable and fertile, suggesting that cerebellins are not essential for survival. Cbln1/2 dKO mice exhibited salience-induced seizures that were aggravated in Cbln1/2/4 tKO mice, suggesting that all cerebellins contribute to brain function. As described previously, Cbln1 KO mice displayed major motor impairments that were aggravated by additional KO of Cbln2. Strikingly, the Cbln1/2 dKO did not cause alterations in synapse density in the hippocampus of young adult (1- and 2-month-old) mice, but produced a selective ∼50% decrease in hippocampal synapse density in the stratum lacunosum moleculare of the CA1 region and in the dentate gyrus of aging, 6-month-old mice. A similar decrease in excitatory synapse density was observed in the striatum and retrosplenial cortex. Behaviorally, the Cbln1 KO produced dramatic changes in motor behaviors that were partly aggravated by additional deletion of Cbln2 and/or Cbln4. Our results show that cerebellins are not essential for survival and do not contribute to initial synapse formation, but perform multiple functions throughout the brain; as a consequence, their ablation results in a delayed loss of synapses and in behavioral impairments.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Cerebellins (Cbln1-4) are trans-synaptic cell adhesion molecules. In the cerebellum, Cbln1 functions as a bidirectional organizer of parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapses by binding to presynaptic neurexins and postsynaptic GluRδ2. Little is known about the function of cerebellins outside of the cerebellum; therefore, the present study used single, double, and triple constitutive KO mice of Cbln1, Cbln2, and Cbln4 to analyze the overall function of cerebellins. We show that cerebellins act as important synaptic organizers in specific subsets of neurons and likely contribute to many different brain functions. We also show that cerebellins are not initially required for synapse formation, but rather for specification and long-term synapse maintenance and demonstrate that all cerebellins, not just Cbln1, contribute to brain function.
Copyright © 2018 the authors 0270-6474/18/384774-17$15.00/0.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cerebellins; neurexins; synapse formation; synapse specification; synaptic organizers

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29691328      PMCID: PMC5956990          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0360-18.2018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  40 in total

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4.  Comparison of Cbln1 and Cbln2 functions using transgenic and knockout mice.

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5.  Conserved domain structure of beta-neurexins. Unusual cleaved signal sequences in receptor-like neuronal cell-surface proteins.

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6.  Cbln family proteins promote synapse formation by regulating distinct neurexin signaling pathways in various brain regions.

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7.  Cbln1 is essential for interaction-dependent secretion of Cbln3.

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8.  GluRδ2 assembles four neurexins into trans-synaptic triad to trigger synapse formation.

Authors:  Sung-Jin Lee; Takeshi Uemura; Tomoyuki Yoshida; Masayoshi Mishina
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2012-03-28       Impact factor: 6.167

9.  Cbln1 regulates rapid formation and maintenance of excitatory synapses in mature cerebellar Purkinje cells in vitro and in vivo.

Authors:  Aya Ito-Ishida; Eriko Miura; Kyoichi Emi; Keiko Matsuda; Takatoshi Iijima; Tetsuro Kondo; Kazuhisa Kohda; Masahiko Watanabe; Michisuke Yuzaki
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10.  Cortical and thalamic innervation of direct and indirect pathway medium-sized spiny neurons in mouse striatum.

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  26 in total

1.  Cbln2 and Cbln4 are expressed in distinct medial habenula-interpeduncular projections and contribute to different behavioral outputs.

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2.  Distinct neurexin-cerebellin complexes control AMPA- and NMDA-receptor responses in a circuit-dependent manner.

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Review 5.  Towards an Understanding of Synapse Formation.

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9.  Cholinergic boutons are closely associated with excitatory cells and four subtypes of inhibitory cells in the inferior colliculus.

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Review 10.  Microglia, Cytokines, and Neural Activity: Unexpected Interactions in Brain Development and Function.

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