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p140Cap Regulates Memory and Synaptic Plasticity through Src-Mediated and Citron-N-Mediated Actin Reorganization

Authors :
Gaia Berto
Ferdinando Di Cunto
Nicoletta Berardi
Daniele Repetto
Tommaso Pizzorusso
Paola Di Stefano
Michela Matteoli
F. Bianchi
Markus Missler
Paola Camera
Paola Defilippi
Noemi Morello
Maurizio Giustetto
Isabella Russo
Eleonora Calcagno
Emilia Turco
Riccardo Melani
Romana Tomasoni
Repetto, D
Camera, P
Melani, R
Morello, N
Russo, I
Calcagno, E
Tomasoni, R
Bianchi, F
Berto, G
Giustetto, M
Berardi, N
Pizzorusso, T
Matteoli, M
Di Stefano, P
Missler, M
Turco, E
Di Cunto, F
Defilippi, P.
Source :
The Journal of Neuroscience. 34:1542-1553
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Society for Neuroscience, 2014.

Abstract

A major challenge in the neuroscience field is the identification of molecules and pathways that control synaptic plasticity and memory. Dendritic spines play a pivotal role in these processes, as the major sites of excitatory synapses in neuronal communication. Previous studies have shown that the scaffold protein p140Cap localizes into dendritic spines and that its knockdown negatively modulates spine shape in culture. However, so far, there is no information on itsin vivorelevance. By using a knock-out mouse model, we here demonstrate that p140Cap is a key element for both learning and synaptic plasticity. Indeed,p140Cap−/−mice are impaired in object recognition test, as well as in LTP and in LTD measurements. Thein vivoeffects of p140Cap loss are presumably attenuated by noncell-autonomous events, since primary neurons obtained fromp140Cap−/−mice show a strong reduction in number of mushroom spines and abnormal organization of synapse-associated F-actin. These phenotypes are most likely caused by a local reduction of the inhibitory control of RhoA and of cortactin toward the actin-depolymerizing factor cofilin. These events can be controlled by p140Cap through its capability to directly inhibit the activation of Src kinase and by its binding to the scaffold protein Citron-N. Altogether, our results provide new insight into how protein associated with dynamic microtubules may regulate spine actin organization through interaction with postsynaptic density components.

Details

ISSN :
15292401 and 02706474
Volume :
34
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Neuroscience
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8695fb9a9de51d5994d45f62f931aa7f