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Latrophilin GPCR signaling mediates synapse formation

Richard Sando, Thomas C Südhof

2021eLife82 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Neural circuit assembly in the brain requires precise establishment of synaptic connections, but the mechanisms of synapse assembly remain incompletely understood. Latrophilins are postsynaptic adhesion-GPCRs that engage in trans-synaptic complexes with presynaptic teneurins and FLRTs. In mouse CA1-region neurons, Latrophilin-2 and Latrophilin-3 are essential for formation of entorhinal-cortex-derived and Schaffer-collateral-derived synapses, respectively. However, it is unknown whether latrophilins function as GPCRs in synapse formation. Here, we show that Latrophilin-2 and Latrophilin-3 exhibit constitutive GPCR activity that increases cAMP levels, which was blocked by a mutation interfering with G-protein and arrestin interactions of GPCRs. The same mutation impaired the ability of Latrophilin-2 and Latrophilin-3 to rescue the synapse-loss phenotype in Latrophilin-2 and Latrophilin-3 knockout neurons in vivo. Our results suggest that Latrophilin-2 and Latrophilin-3 require GPCR signaling in synapse formation, indicating that latrophilins promote synapse formation in the hippocampus by activating a classical GPCR-signaling pathway.

Topics & Concepts

SynapsePostsynaptic potentialG protein-coupled receptorNeuroscienceCell biologyBiologyExcitatory synapseSilent synapseChemistryRibbon synapseHEK 293 cellsSynapse formationNeurotransmissionMutationSynaptic plasticitySignal transductionPhenotypeImmunological synapseFunction (biology)Biological neural networkActive zoneHippocampusSignaling Pathways in DiseaseReceptor Mechanisms and SignalingNeuroendocrine regulation and behavior
Latrophilin GPCR signaling mediates synapse formation | Litcius