4.7 Article

Presynaptic Neuronal Pentraxin Receptor Organizes Excitatory and Inhibitory Synapses

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 37, Issue 5, Pages 1062-1080

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2768-16.2016

Keywords

AMPAR; cell adhesion molecule; neuronal pentraxin receptor; synaptogenesis

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute of Mental Health [MH052804]

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Three neuronal pentraxins are expressed in brain, the membrane-bound neuronal pentraxin receptor (NPR) and the secreted proteins NP1 andNARP(i.e., NP2). Neuronal pentraxins bind to AMPARs at excitatory synapses and play important, well-documented roles in the activity-dependent regulation of neural circuits via this binding activity. However, it is unknown whether neuronal pentraxins perform roles in synapses beyond modulating postsynaptic AMPAR-dependent plasticity, and whether they may even act in inhibitory synapses. Here, we show that NPR expressed in non-neuronal cells potently induces formation of both excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic specializations in cocultured hippocampal neurons. Knockdown of NPR in hippocampal neurons, conversely, dramatically decreased assembly and function of both excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic specializations. Overexpression of NPR rescued the NPR knockdown phenotype but did not in itself change synapse numbers or properties. However, the NPR knock down decreased the levels of NARP, whereas NPR overexpression produced a dramatic increase in the levels of NP1 and NARP, suggesting that NPR recruits and stabilizes NP1 and NARP on the presynaptic plasma membrane. Mechanistically, NPR acted in excitatory synapse assembly by binding to the N-terminal domain of AMPARs; antagonists of AMPA and GABA receptors selectively inhibited NPR-induced heterologous excitatory and inhibitory synapse assembly, respectively, but did not affect neurexin-1 beta-induced synapse assembly as a control. Our data suggest that neuronal pentraxins act as signaling complexes that function as general trans-synaptic organizers of both excitatory and inhibitory synapses by a mechanism that depends, at least in part, on the activity of the neurotransmitter receptors at these synapses.

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