4.5 Article

N-glycosylation of the AMPA-type glutamate receptor regulates cell surface expression and tetramer formation affecting channel function

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY
Volume 147, Issue 6, Pages 730-747

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jnc.14565

Keywords

AMPA-type glutamate receptor; channel; glycosylation; receptor trafficking

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT) of Japan [23110010, 23110006, 16H01277, KAKENHI 17K08541]
  2. University of Miyazaki Japanese government scholarship from the MEXT of Japan
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [16H01277] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The AMPA-type glutamate receptor (AMPA-R) plays a primary role in principal excitatory synaptic transmission and many neuronal functions including synaptic plasticity that underlie learning and memory. N-glycosylation is one of the major post-translational modifications of membrane proteins, but its specific roles in neurons remain largely unknown. AMPA-R subunits are N-glycosylated at their extracellular domains during their biosynthesis in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi system. Six N-glycosylation sites are presumed to exist in the extracellular domain of GluA1, which is a member of the AMPA-R subunits. We observed that the intracellular trafficking and cell surface expression were strongly suppressed in the GluA1 mutants lacking N-glycans at N63/N363 in HEK293T cells. Multimer analysis using Blue Native-PAGE displayed the impaired tetramer formation in the glycosylation mutants (N63S and N363S), indicating that the mis-transport was caused by impaired tetramer formation. N63S and N363S mutants were primarily degraded via the lysosomal pathway. Flag-tagged N363S GluA1, but not N63S GluA1, expressed in primary cortical neuron cultures prepared from GluA1 knockout mice was observed to localize at the cell surface. Co-expression of GluA2 partially rescued tetramer formation and the cell surface expression of N363S GluA1 but not N63S GluA1, in HEK293T cells. Electrophysiological analysis also demonstrated functional heteromers of N363S GluA1 with GluA2. These data suggest that site-specific N-glycans on GluA1 subunit regulates tetramer formation, intracellular trafficking, and cell surface expression of AMPA-R.

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