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Neuronal Inactivity Co-opts LTP Machinery to Drive Potassium Channel Splicing and Homeostatic Spike Widening
Author(s) -
Boxing Li,
Benjamin S. Suutari,
Simón D. Sun,
Zheng-Yi Luo,
ChuanChuan Wei,
Nicolas Chenouard,
Nataniel J. Mandelberg,
Guoan Zhang,
Brie Wamsley,
Guoling Tian,
Sandrine Sanchez,
Sikun You,
Lianyan Huang,
Thomas A. Neubert,
Gord Fishell,
Richard W. Tsien
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2020.05.013
Subject(s) - biology , spike (software development) , neuroscience , rna splicing , potassium channel , long term potentiation , homeostasis , alternative splicing , microbiology and biotechnology , genetics , biophysics , receptor , gene , rna , gene isoform , management , economics
Homeostasis of neural firing properties is important in stabilizing neuronal circuitry, but how such plasticity might depend on alternative splicing is not known. Here we report that chronic inactivity homeostatically increases action potential duration by changing alternative splicing of BK channels; this requires nuclear export of the splicing factor Nova-2. Inactivity and Nova-2 relocation were connected by a novel synapto-nuclear signaling pathway that surprisingly invoked mechanisms akin to Hebbian plasticity: Ca 2+ -permeable AMPA receptor upregulation, L-type Ca 2+ channel activation, enhanced spine Ca 2+ transients, nuclear translocation of a CaM shuttle, and nuclear CaMKIV activation. These findings not only uncover commonalities between homeostatic and Hebbian plasticity but also connect homeostatic regulation of synaptic transmission and neuronal excitability. The signaling cascade provides a full-loop mechanism for a classic autoregulatory feedback loop proposed ∼25 years ago. Each element of the loop has been implicated previously in neuropsychiatric disease.

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