Synaptic PRG-1 Modulates Excitatory Transmission via Lipid Phosphate-Mediated Signaling

2009 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Synaptic PRG-1 Modulates Excitatory Transmission via Lipid Phosphate-Mediated Signaling​
Trimbuch, T.; Beed, P.; Vogt, J.; Schuchmann, S.; Maier, N.; Kintscher, M. & Breustedt, J. et al.​ (2009) 
Cell138(6) pp. 1222​-1235​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2009.06.050 

Documents & Media

License

GRO License GRO License

Details

Authors
Trimbuch, Thorsten; Beed, Prateep; Vogt, Johannes; Schuchmann, Sebastian; Maier, Nikolaus; Kintscher, Michael; Breustedt, Jörg; Schuelke, Markus; Streu, Nora; Kieselmann, Olga; Brunk, Irene; Laube, Gregor; Strauss, Ulf; Battefeld, Arne; Wende, Hagen; Birchmeier, Carmen; Wiese, Stefan; Sendtner, Michael; Kawabe, Hiroshi; Kishimoto-Suga, Mika; Brose, Nils ; Baumgart, Jan; Geist, Beate; Aoki, Junken; Savaskan, Nic E.; Braeuer, Anja U.; Chun, Jerold; Ninnemann, Olaf; Schmitz, Dietmar; Nitsch, Robert
Abstract
Plasticity related gene-1 (PRG-1) is a brain-specific membrane protein related to lipid phosphate phosphatases, which acts in the hippocampus specifically at the excitatory synapse terminating on glutamatergic neurons. Deletion of prg-1 in mice leads to epileptic seizures and augmentation of EPSCs, but not IPSCs. In utero electroporation of PRG-1 into deficient animals revealed that PRG-1 modulates excitation at the synaptic junction. Mutation of the extracellular domain of PRG-1 crucial for its interaction with lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) abolished the ability to prevent hyperexcitability. As LPA application in vitro induced hyperexcitability in wild-type but not in LPA(2) receptor-deficient animals, and uptake of phospholipids is reduced in PRG-1-deficient neurons, we assessed PRG-1/LPA(2) receptor deficient animals, and found that the pathophysiology observed in the PRG-1-deficient mice was fully reverted. Thus, we propose PRG-1 as an important player in the modulatory control of hippocampal excitability dependent on presynaptic LPA(2) receptor signaling.
Issue Date
2009
Publisher
Cell Press
Journal
Cell 
ISSN
0092-8674

Reference

Citations


Social Media