| Literature DB >> 36067793 |
Chen Zhang1, Anna Dischler1, Kaitlyn Glover1, Yan Qin1.
Abstract
Zinc is an essential trace element that stabilizes protein structures and allosterically modulates a plethora of enzymes, ion channels and neurotransmitter receptors. Labile zinc (Zn2+) acts as an intracellular and intercellular signalling molecule in response to various stimuli, which is especially important in the central nervous system. Zincergic neurons, characterized by Zn2+ deposits in synaptic vesicles and presynaptic Zn2+ release, are found in the cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, olfactory bulb and spinal cord. To provide an overview of synaptic Zn2+ and intracellular Zn2+ signalling in neurons, the present paper summarizes the fluorescent sensors used to detect Zn2+ signals, the cellular mechanisms regulating the generation and buffering of Zn2+ signals, as well as the current perspectives on their pleiotropic effects on phosphorylation signalling, synapse formation, synaptic plasticity, as well as sensory and cognitive function.Entities:
Keywords: neuronal; sensor; signalling; zinc
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36067793 PMCID: PMC9448499 DOI: 10.1098/rsob.220188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Biol ISSN: 2046-2441 Impact factor: 7.124
List of some sensors used to measure and detect neuronal Zn2+ signals.
| localization | name | dissociation constant ( | application | references |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| cytosol | ZP1 | 0.7 nM | hippocampal slices | [ |
| primary neurons | ||||
| ZP3 | 0.7 nM | hippocampal neurons and slices | [ | |
| ZnAF-2DA | 2.7 nM | hippocampal slices | [ | |
| FluoZin-3 AM | 15 nM | primary neurons | [ | |
| hippocampal slices | ||||
| GZnP3 | 1.3 nM | primary neurons | [ | |
| mitochondria | RhodZin-3 | 65 nM | primary neurons | [ |
| PC12 cells | ||||
| Mito-ZapCY1 | 1.6 pM | [ | ||
| lumen of synaptic vesicles and acid compartments | TSQ | 155 nM–48 µM | hippocampal slices | [ |
| Zinquin | 620 nM | primary neurons | [ | |
| SpiroZin-2 | 3.6 nM | hippocampal slices | [ | |
| extracellular regions (synaptically released Zn2+) | FluoZin-3 | 15 nM | hippocampal slices | [ |
| ZP4 | 0.65 nM | hippocampal slices | [ | |
| primary neurons | ||||
| ZnAF-2 | 2.7 nM | hippocampal slices | [ | |
| NewPort Green DCF | 1 μM | hippocampal slices | [ | |
| LZ9 | 0.57 nM | coronal brain slices containing dorsal cochlear nucleus | [ |
Figure 1Modulation and targets of intracellular and synaptic Zn2+ signals in glutamatergic neurons. Intracellular Zn2+ signals can be generated via influx from extracellular environments mediated by ZIP1, ZIP3, and opening of ion channels (NMDAR, GluA2-lacking AMPAR, VGCC), liberation from metallothioneins (MT3), or release through the TRPML1 channel from lysosomes and late endosomes. Cytosolic Zn2+ is transported out of neurons by ZnT1 and sequestered into synaptic vesicles by ZnT3. Low concentrations of mitochondrial Zn2+ are maintained by ZnT9. Synaptically released Zn2+ can inhibit AMPAR containing GluA2 subunits and NMDAR to regulate synaptic activity. Zn2+ can also induce GPR39-mediated signalling. Postsynaptic Zn2+ signals translocate Shank2 and Shank3 to postsynaptic regions, thereby enhancing recruitments of AMPAR's GluA2 subunits and promoting removal of GluA1 subunits.