Postsynaptic regulation of synaptic plasticity by synaptotagmin 4 requires both C2 domains
Author(s)
Littleton, J. Troy; Melom, Jan Elizabeth; Jorquera, Ramon; Barber, Cynthia F.
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Ca[superscript 2+] influx into synaptic compartments during activity is a key mediator of neuronal plasticity. Although the role of presynaptic Ca[superscript 2+] in triggering vesicle fusion though the Ca[superscript 2+] sensor synaptotagmin 1 (Syt 1) is established, molecular mechanisms that underlie responses to postsynaptic Ca[superscript 2+] influx remain unclear. In this study, we demonstrate that fusion-competent Syt 4 vesicles localize postsynaptically at both neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) and central nervous system synapses in Drosophila melanogaster. Syt 4 messenger RNA and protein expression are strongly regulated by neuronal activity, whereas altered levels of postsynaptic Syt 4 modify synaptic growth and presynaptic release properties. Syt 4 is required for known forms of activity-dependent structural plasticity at NMJs. Synaptic proliferation and retrograde signaling mediated by Syt 4 requires functional C2A and C2B Ca[superscript 2+]–binding sites, as well as serine 284, an evolutionarily conserved substitution for a key Ca[superscript 2+]-binding aspartic acid found in other synaptotagmins. These data suggest that Syt 4 regulates activity-dependent release of postsynaptic retrograde signals that promote synaptic plasticity, similar to the role of Syt 1 as a Ca[superscript 2+] sensor for presynaptic vesicle fusion.
Date issued
2009-03Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences; Picower Institute for Learning and MemoryJournal
Journal of Cell Biology
Publisher
The Rockefeller University Press
Citation
Barber, Cynthia F et al. “Postsynaptic regulation of synaptic plasticity by synaptotagmin 4 requires both C2 domains.” The Journal of Cell Biology 187.2 (2009): 295-310. © 2010 by The Rockefeller University Press.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0021-9525
1540-8140
Keywords
United States National Institutes of Healt (Grant NS40296)