AI Article Synopsis

  • TMEM132D is a gene linked to problems like panic attacks and depression in humans.
  • Scientists studied this gene in tiny worms (C. elegans) and found that it affects how certain brain cells look.
  • They discovered that a protein called NAP1 interacts with TMEM132D, and changes in this interaction can cause problems in how cells move and behave.

Article Abstract

TMEM132D is a human gene identified with multiple risk alleles for panic disorders, anxiety and major depressive disorders. Defining a conserved family of transmembrane proteins, TMEM132D and its homologs are still of unknown molecular functions. By generating loss-of-function mutants of the sole TMEM132 ortholog in C. elegans, we identify abnormal morphologic phenotypes in the dopaminergic PDE neurons. Using a yeast two-hybrid screen, we find that NAP1 directly interacts with the cytoplasmic domain of human TMEM132D, and mutations in C. elegans tmem-132 that disrupt interaction with NAP1 cause similar morphologic defects in the PDE neurons. NAP1 is a component of the WAVE regulatory complex (WRC) that controls F-actin cytoskeletal dynamics. Decreasing activity of WRC rescues the PDE defects in tmem-132 mutants, whereas gain-of-function of TMEM132D in mammalian cells inhibits WRC, leading to decreased abundance of select WRC components, impaired actin nucleation and cell motility. We propose that metazoan TMEM132 family proteins play evolutionarily conserved roles in regulating NAP1 protein homologs to restrict inappropriate WRC activity, cytoskeletal and morphologic changes in the cell.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7962252PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13041-021-00767-wDOI Listing

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