A functional role of postsynaptic density-95-guanylate kinase-associated protein complex in regulating Shank assembly and stability to synapses.
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2004
abstract:
Postsynaptic density (PSD) proteins include scaffold, cytoskeletal, and signaling proteins that structurally and functionally interact with
glutamate receptors and other postsynaptic membrane proteins. The molecular mechanisms regulating the assembly of PSD proteins
and their associations with synapses are still widely unknown. We investigated the molecular mechanisms of Shank1 targeting and
synapse assembly by looking at the function of guanylate kinase-associated protein (GKAP) and PSD-95 interactions. Shank1 when it is
not associated to GKAP, which binds to the Shank PSD-95-Discs Large-zona occludens-1 domain, forms filamentous and fusiform
structures in which the Src homology 3 domain specifically interacts with the ankyrin repeat domain, thus allowing its multimerization
via a novel form of intermolecular interaction. Surprisingly, in both COS-7 cells and hippocampal neurons, GKAP forms insoluble
aggregates with Shank that colocalize with heat shock protein 70 and neurofilaments, two markers of the aggresomes in which misfolded
proteins accumulate. However, the two proteins are organized in clusters in COS cells and synaptic clusters in neurons when both are
overexpressed and associated with wild-type PSD-95, but not with palmitoylation-deficient PSD-95. Synaptic activity in neurons induces
the formation of Shank and GKAP intracellular aggregation and degradation. Similarly, the overexpression of a GKAP mutant that is
incapable of binding PSD-95 induces Shank aggregation and degradation in neurons. Our data suggest a possible functional and structural
role of the PSD-95-GKAP complex in Shank and PSD protein assembly and stability to synapses.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Tonna, MARIA NOEMI; Passafaro, Maria; Sala, Carlo; Piccoli, Giovanni
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