4.7 Article

βIII Spectrin Is Necessary for Formation of the Constricted Neck of Dendritic Spines and Regulation of Synaptic Activity in Neurons

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 37, Issue 27, Pages 6442-6459

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3520-16.2017

Keywords

cytoskeleton; dendritic spines; electron microscopy; hippocampal neurons; spectrin; synapse

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 GM-095977, R01 DC-006213, R01 DC-011554, S10 0D-016236, R01 GM-104003, R01 GM-117984]
  2. National Ataxia Foundation

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Dendritic spines are postsynaptic structures in neurons often having a mushroom-like shape. Physiological significance and cytoskeletal mechanisms that maintain this shape are poorly understood. The spectrin-based membrane skeleton maintains the biconcave shape of erythrocytes, but whether spectrins also determine the shape of nonerythroid cells is less clear. We show that beta III spectrin in hippocampal and cortical neurons from rodent embryos of both sexes is distributed throughout the somatodendritic compartment but is particularly enriched in the neck and base of dendritic spines and largely absent from spine heads. Electron microscopy revealed that beta III spectrin forms a detergent-resistant cytoskeletal network at these sites. Knockdown of beta III spectrin results in a significant decrease in the density of dendritic spines. Surprisingly, the density of presynaptic terminals is not affected by beta III spectrin knockdown. However, instead of making normal spiny synapses, the presynaptic structures in beta III spectrin-depleted neurons make shaft synapses that exhibit increased amplitudes of miniature EPSCs indicative of excessive postsynaptic excitation. Thus, beta III spectrin is necessary for formation of the constricted shape of the spine neck, which in turn controls communication between the synapse and the parent dendrite to prevent excessive excitation. Notably, mutations of SPTNB2 encoding spectrin are associated with neurodegenerative syndromes, spinocerebellar ataxia Type 5, and spectrin-associated autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxia Type 1, but molecular mechanisms linking beta III spectrin functions to neuronal pathologies remain unresolved. Our data suggest that spinocerebellar ataxia Type 5 and spectrin-associated autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxia Type 1 pathology likely arises from poorly controlled synaptic activity that leads to excitotoxicity and neurodegeneration.

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