4.5 Article

Dystroglycan and Kir4.1 coclustering in retinal Muller glia is regulated by laminin-1 and requires the PDZ-ligand domain of Kir4.1

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY
Volume 94, Issue 3, Pages 691-702

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1471-4159.2005.03191.x

Keywords

basal lamina; dystroglycan; Muller glia; potassium buffering; retina; syntrophin

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Inwardly rectifying potassium (Kir) channels in Muller glia play a critical role in the spatial buffering of potassium ions that accumulate during retinal activity. To this end, Kir channels show a polarized subcellular distribution with the predominant channel subunit in Muller glia, Kir4.1, clustered in the endfeet of these cells at the inner limiting membrane. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying their distribution have yet to be identified. Here, we show that laminin, agrin and alpha-dystroglycan (DG) codistribute with Kir4.1 at the inner limiting membrane in the retina and that laminin-1 induces the clustering of alpha-DG, syntrophin and Kir4.1 in Muller cell cultures. In addition, we found that alpha-DG clusters were enriched for agrin and sought to investigate the role of agrin in their formation using recombinant C-agrins. Both C-agrin 4,8 and C-agrin 0,0 failed to induce alpha-DG clustering and neither of them potentiated the alpha-DG clustering induced by laminin-1. Finally, our data reveal that deletion of the PDZ-ligand domain of Kir4.1 prevents their laminin-induced clustering. These findings indicate that both laminin-1 and alpha-DG are involved in the distribution of Kir4.1 to specific Muller cell membrane domains and that this process occurs via a PDZ-domain-mediated interaction. Thus, in the basal lamina laminin is an essential regulator involved in clearing excess potassium released during neuronal activity, thereby contributing to the maintenance of normal synaptic transmission in the retina.

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