4.7 Article

Identifying new players in structural synaptic plasticity through dArc1 interrogation

Journal

ISCIENCE
Volume 26, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2023.108048

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Structural synaptic plasticity is crucial for learning and memory, and the protein dArc1 plays a significant role in regulating this process. The study reveals that dArc1 affects multiple cellular processes, including metabolism, phagocytosis, and RNA splicing, thereby acting as a master regulator of plasticity.
The formation, expansion, and pruning of synapses, known as structural synaptic plasticity, is needed for learning and memory, and perturbation of plasticity is associated with many neurological disorders and diseases. Previously, we observed that the Drosophila homolog of Activity-regulated cytoskeleton-associated protein (dArc1), forms a capsid-like structure, associates with its own mRNA, and is transported across synapses. We demonstrated that this transfer is needed for structural synaptic plasticity. To identify mRNAs that are modified by dArc1 in presynaptic neuron and postsynaptic muscle, we disrupted the expression of dArc1 and performed genomic analysis with deep sequencing. We found that dArc1 affects the expression of genes involved in metabolism, phagocytosis, and RNA-splicing. Through immunoprecipitation we also identified potential mRNA cargos of dArc1 capsids. This study suggests that dArc1 acts as a master regulator of plasticity by affecting several distinct and highly conserved cellular processes.

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