Acute Inactivation of PSD-95 Destabilizes AMPA Receptors at Hippocampal Synapses
Author(s) -
Guillermo A. Yudowski,
Olav Olsen,
Hillel Adesnik,
Kurt W. Marek,
David S. Bredt
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0053965
Subject(s) - ampa receptor , silent synapse , postsynaptic density , hippocampal formation , glutamate receptor , receptor , microbiology and biotechnology , excitatory postsynaptic potential , glutamatergic , postsynaptic potential , neurotransmission , neuroscience , nmda receptor , chemistry , biophysics , biology , biochemistry
Postsynatptic density protein (PSD-95) is a 95 kDa scaffolding protein that assembles signaling complexes at synapses. Over-expression of PSD-95 in primary hippocampal neurons selectively increases synaptic localization of AMPA receptors; however, mice lacking PSD-95 display grossly normal glutamatergic transmission in hippocampus. To further study the scaffolding role of PSD-95 at excitatory synapses, we generated a recombinant PSD-95-4c containing a tetracysteine motif, which specifically binds a fluorescein derivative and allows for acute and permanent inactivation of PSD-95. Interestingly, acute inactivation of PSD-95 in rat hippocampal cultures rapidly reduced surface AMPA receptor immunostaining, but did not affected NMDA or transferrin receptor localization. Acute photoinactivation of PSD-95 in dissociated neurons causes ∼80% decrease in GluR2 surface staining observed by live-cell microscopy within 15 minutes of PSD-95-4c ablation. These results confirm that PSD-95 stabilizes AMPA receptors at postsynaptic sites and provides insight into the dynamic interplay between PSD-95 and AMPA receptors in live neurons.
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