Caldendrin-Jacob: A protein liaison that couples NMDA receptor signalling to the nucleus

被引:142
作者
Dieterich, Daniela C. [1 ]
Karpova, Anna [1 ]
Mikhaylova, Marina [1 ]
Zdobnova, Irina [1 ]
Koenig, Imbritt [1 ]
Landwehr, Marco [1 ]
Kreutz, Martin [1 ]
Smalla, Karl-Heinz [1 ]
Richter, Karin [2 ]
Landgraf, Peter [1 ]
Reissner, Carsten [1 ]
Boeckers, Tobias M. [3 ]
Zuschratter, Werner [1 ]
Spilker, Christina [1 ]
Seidenbecher, Constanze I. [1 ]
Garner, Craig C. [4 ]
Gundelfinger, Eckart D. [1 ]
Kreutz, Michael R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Leibniz Inst Neurobiol, Dept Neurochem & Mol Biol, AG Mol Mech Plastic, Magdeburg, Germany
[2] Otto Von Guericke Univ, Inst Med Neurobiol, Magdeburg, Germany
[3] Univ Ulm, Inst Anat & Cell Biol, Ulm, Germany
[4] Stanford Univ, Nancy Pritzker Lab, Dept Psychiat & Behav Sci, Palo Alto, CA 94304 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1371/journal.pbio.0060034
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 [生物化学与分子生物学]; 081704 [应用化学];
摘要
NMDA ( N-methyl-D-aspartate) receptors and calcium can exert multiple and very divergent effects within neuronal cells, thereby impacting opposing occurrences such as synaptic plasticity and neuronal degeneration. The neuronal Ca2+ sensor Caldendrin is a postsynaptic density component with high similarity to calmodulin. Jacob, a recently identified Caldendrin binding partner, is a novel protein abundantly expressed in limbic brain and cerebral cortex. Strictly depending upon activation of NMDA-type glutamate receptors, Jacob is recruited to neuronal nuclei, resulting in a rapid stripping of synaptic contacts and in a drastically altered morphology of the dendritic tree. Jacob's nuclear trafficking from distal dendrites crucially requires the classical Importin pathway. Caldendrin binds to Jacob's nuclear localization signal in a Ca2+- dependent manner, thereby controlling Jacob's extranuclear localization by competing with the binding of Importin-alpha to Jacob's nuclear localization signal. This competition requires sustained synapto-dendritic Ca2+ levels, which presumably cannot be achieved by activation of extrasynaptic NMDA receptors, but are confined to Ca2+ microdomains such as postsynaptic spines. Extrasynaptic NMDA receptors, as opposed to their synaptic counterparts, trigger the cAMP response element-binding protein ( CREB) shut-off pathway, and cell death. We found that nuclear knockdown of Jacob prevents CREB shut-off after extrasynaptic NMDA receptor activation, whereas its nuclear overexpression induces CREB shut-off without NMDA receptor stimulation. Importantly, nuclear knockdown of Jacob attenuates NMDA-induced loss of synaptic contacts, and neuronal degeneration. This defines a novel mechanism of synapse-to-nucleus communication via a synaptic Ca2+- sensor protein, which links the activity of NMDA receptors to nuclear signalling events involved in modelling synapto-dendritic input and NMDA receptor-induced cellular degeneration.
引用
收藏
页码:286 / 306
页数:21
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