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Publication : Phospholipid scramblase Xkr8 is required for developmental axon pruning via phosphatidylserine exposure.

First Author  Neniskyte U Year  2023
Journal  EMBO J Volume  42
Issue  14 Pages  e111790
PubMed ID  37211968 Mgi Jnum  J:338439
Mgi Id  MGI:7511368 Doi  10.15252/embj.2022111790
Citation  Neniskyte U, et al. (2023) Phospholipid scramblase Xkr8 is required for developmental axon pruning via phosphatidylserine exposure. EMBO J 42(14):e111790
abstractText  The mature mammalian brain connectome emerges during development via the extension and pruning of neuronal connections. Glial cells have been identified as key players in the phagocytic elimination of neuronal synapses and projections. Recently, phosphatidylserine has been identified as neuronal "eat-me" signal that guides elimination of unnecessary input sources, but the associated transduction systems involved in such pruning are yet to be described. Here, we identified Xk-related protein 8 (Xkr8), a phospholipid scramblase, as a key factor for the pruning of axons in the developing mammalian brain. We found that mouse Xkr8 is highly expressed immediately after birth and required for phosphatidylserine exposure in the hippocampus. Mice lacking Xkr8 showed excess excitatory nerve terminals, increased density of cortico-cortical and cortico-spinal projections, aberrant electrophysiological profiles of hippocampal neurons, and global brain hyperconnectivity. These data identify phospholipid scrambling by Xkr8 as a central process in the labeling and discrimination of developing neuronal projections for pruning in the mammalian brain.
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