First Author | Ablinger C | Year | 2022 |
Journal | Int J Mol Sci | Volume | 23 |
Issue | 17 | PubMed ID | 36077281 |
Mgi Jnum | J:336336 | Mgi Id | MGI:7340478 |
Doi | 10.3390/ijms23179885 | Citation | Ablinger C, et al. (2022) alpha2delta-4 and Cachd1 Proteins Are Regulators of Presynaptic Functions. Int J Mol Sci 23(17) |
abstractText | The alpha2delta auxiliary subunits of voltage-gated calcium channels (VGCC) were traditionally regarded as modulators of biophysical channel properties. In recent years, channel-independent functions of these subunits, such as involvement in synapse formation, have been identified. In the central nervous system, alpha2delta isoforms 1, 2, and 3 are strongly expressed, regulating glutamatergic synapse formation by a presynaptic mechanism. Although the alpha2delta-4 isoform is predominantly found in the retina with very little expression in the brain, it was recently linked to brain functions. In contrast, Cachd1, a novel alpha2delta-like protein, shows strong expression in brain, but its function in neurons is not yet known. Therefore, we aimed to investigate the presynaptic functions of alpha2delta-4 and Cachd1 by expressing individual proteins in cultured hippocampal neurons. Both alpha2delta-4 and Cachd1 are expressed in the presynaptic membrane and could rescue a severe synaptic defect present in triple knockout/knockdown neurons that lacked the alpha2delta-1-3 isoforms (alpha2delta TKO/KD). This observation suggests that presynaptic localization and the regulation of synapse formation in glutamatergic neurons is a general feature of alpha2delta proteins. In contrast to this redundant presynaptic function, alpha2delta-4 and Cachd1 differentially regulate the abundance of presynaptic calcium channels and the amplitude of presynaptic calcium transients. These functional differences may be caused by subtle isoform-specific differences in alpha1-alpha2delta protein-protein interactions, as revealed by structural homology modelling. Taken together, our study identifies both alpha2delta-4 and Cachd1 as presynaptic regulators of synapse formation, differentiation, and calcium channel functions that can at least partially compensate for the loss of alpha2delta-1-3. Moreover, we show that regulating glutamatergic synapse formation and differentiation is a critical and surprisingly redundant function of alpha2delta and Cachd1. |