4.8 Article

The LRR-TM protein PAN-1 interacts with MYRF to promote its nuclear translocation in synaptic remodeling

Journal

ELIFE
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

eLIFE SCIENCES PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.67628

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31571272, ShanghaiTech]
  2. University Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China [32061143020]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China

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The neural circuits develop through a plastic phase orchestrated by genetic programs and environmental signals. A transmembrane protein called PAN-1 has been identified as essential for synaptic rewiring in C. elegans. The interaction between PAN-1 and MYRF on the cell membrane is crucial for the neuronal rewiring process.
Neural circuits develop through a plastic phase orchestrated by genetic programs and environmental signals. We have identified a leucine-rich-repeat domain transmembrane protein PAN-1 as a factor required for synaptic rewiring in C. elegans. PAN-1 localizes on cell membrane and binds with MYRF, a membrane-bound transcription factor indispensable for promoting synaptic rewiring. Full-length MYRF was known to undergo self-cleavage on ER membrane and release its transcriptional N-terminal fragment in cultured cells. We surprisingly find that MYRF trafficking to cell membrane before cleavage is pivotal for C. elegans development and the timing of N-MYRF release coincides with the onset of synaptic rewiring. On cell membrane PAN-1 and MYRF interact with each other via their extracellular regions. Loss of PAN-1 abolishes MYRF cell membrane localization, consequently blocking myrf-dependent neuronal rewiring process. Thus, through interactions with a cooperating factor on the cell membrane, MYRF may link cell surface activities to transcriptional cascades required for development.

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