Xiang_2014_Mol.Brain_7_15

Reference

Title : Interaction of Acetylcholinesterase with Neurexin-1beta regulates Glutamatergic Synaptic stability in Hippocampal neurons - Xiang_2014_Mol.Brain_7_15
Author(s) : Xiang YY , Dong H , Yang BB , MacDonald JF , Lu WY
Ref : Mol Brain , 7 :15 , 2014
Abstract :

BACKGROUND: Excess expression of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) in the cortex and hippocampus causes a decrease in the number of glutamatergic synapses and alters the expression of neurexin and neuroligin, trans-synaptic proteins that control synaptic stability. The molecular sequence and three-dimensional structure of AChE are homologous to the corresponding aspects of the ectodomain of neuroligin. This study investigated whether excess AChE interacts physically with neurexin to destabilize glutamatergic synapses.
RESULTS: The results showed that AChE clusters colocalized with neurexin assemblies in the neurites of hippocampal neurons and that AChE co-immunoprecipitated with neurexin from the lysate of these neurons. Moreover, when expressed in human embryonic kidney 293 cells, N-glycosylated AChE co-immunoprecipitated with non-O-glycosylated neurexin-1beta, with N-glycosylation of the AChE being required for this co-precipitation to occur. Increasing extracellular AChE decreased the association of neurexin with neuroligin and inhibited neuroligin-induced synaptogenesis. The number and activity of excitatory synapses in cultured hippocampal neurons were reduced by extracellular catalytically inactive AChE.
CONCLUSIONS: Excessive glycosylated AChE could competitively disrupt a subset of the neurexin-neuroligin junctions consequently impairing the integrity of glutamatergic synapses. This might serve a molecular mechanism of excessive AChE induced neurodegeneration.

PubMedSearch : Xiang_2014_Mol.Brain_7_15
PubMedID: 24594013

Related information

Citations formats

Xiang YY, Dong H, Yang BB, MacDonald JF, Lu WY (2014)
Interaction of Acetylcholinesterase with Neurexin-1beta regulates Glutamatergic Synaptic stability in Hippocampal neurons
Mol Brain 7 :15

Xiang YY, Dong H, Yang BB, MacDonald JF, Lu WY (2014)
Mol Brain 7 :15