AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the role of complexin II (Cpx) in regulating neurotransmitter release at central synapses, focusing specifically on its N-terminal region (amino acids 1-27) which plays a critical role in both stimulating and inhibiting synaptic transmission.
  • - Through experiments such as mutagenesis and membrane fusion assays, the research reveals that the hydrophobic characteristics of the N-terminus are important for enhancing spontaneous neurotransmitter release, while alterations in specific amino acids can impair evoked release and affect the release pool size.
  • - The findings highlight the nuanced functions of Cpx in synaptic activity, emphasizing its effect on the balance between spontaneous and evoked neurotransmitter release in mouse hippocampal neurons.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: The release of neurotransmitters at central synapses is dependent on a cascade of protein interactions, specific to the presynaptic compartment. Amongst those dedicated molecules the cytosolic complexins play an incompletely defined role as synaptic transmission regulators. Complexins are multidomain SNARE complex binding proteins which confer both inhibitory and stimulatory functions. Using systematic mutagenesis and combining reconstituted membrane fusion assays with electrophysiology in neurons, we deciphered the function of the N-terminus of complexin II (Cpx). The N-terminus (amino acid 1 - 27) starts with a region enriched in hydrophobic amino acids (1-12), which can lead to lipid binding. In contrast to mutants which maintain the hydrophobic character and the stimulatory function of Cpx, non-conservative exchanges largely perturbed spontaneous and evoked exocytosis. Mutants in the downstream region (amino acid 11-18) show differential effects. Cpx-A12W increased spontaneous release without affecting evoked release whereas replacing D15 with amino acids of different shapes or hydrophobic properties (but not charge) not only increased spontaneous release, but also impaired evoked release and surprisingly reduced the size of the readily releasable pool, a novel Cpx function, unanticipated from previous studies. Thus, the exact amino acid composition of the Cpx N-terminus fine tunes the degree of spontaneous and evoked neurotransmitter release.

Significance Statement: We describe in this work the importance of the N-terminal domain of the small regulatory cytosolic protein complexin in spontaneous and evoked glutamatergic neurotransmitter release at hippocampal mouse neurons. We show using a combination of biochemical, imaging and electrophysiological techniques that the binding of the proximal region of complexin (amino acids 1-10) to lipids is crucial for spontaneous synaptic vesicular release. Furthermore, we identify a single amino acid at position D15 which is structurally important since it not only is involved in spontaneous release but, when mutated, also decreases drastically the readily releasable pool, a function that was never attributed to complexin.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10802614PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.01.12.575336DOI Listing

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