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Abstract
Following exocytosis, synaptic vesicles (SVs) have to be reformed with the correct complement of proteins in the correct stoichiometry to ensure continued neurotransmission. Synaptophysin is a highly abundant, integral SV protein necessary for the efficient retrieval of the SV SNARE protein, synaptobrevin II (sybII). However the molecular mechanism underpinning synaptophysin-dependent sybII retrieval is still unclear. We recently identified a male patient with severe intellectual disability, hypotonia, epilepsy and callosal agenesis who has a point mutation in the juxtamembrane region of the fourth transmembrane domain of synaptophysin (T198I). This mutation had no effect on the activity-dependent retrieval of synaptophysin that was tagged with the genetically-encoded pH-sensitive reporter (pHluorin) in synaptophysin knockout hippocampal cultures. This suggested the mutant has no global effect on SV endocytosis, which was confirmed when retrieval of a different SV cargo (the glutamate transporter vGLUT1) was examined. However neurons expressing this T198I mutant did display impaired activity-dependent sybII retrieval, similar to that observed in synaptophysin knockout neurons. Interestingly this impairment did not result in an increased stranding of sybII at the plasma membrane. Screening of known human synaptophysin mutations revealed a similar presynaptic phenotype between T198I and a mutation found in X-linked intellectual disability. Thus this novel human synaptophysin mutation has revealed that aberrant retrieval and increased plasma membrane localisation of SV cargo can be decoupled in human disease.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Neurobiology of disease |
Volume | 108 |
Early online date | 5 Sept 2017 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 5 Sept 2017 |
Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)
- Journal Article
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- 1 Finished
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Molecular control of synaptobrevin retrieval and its biological function by synaptophysin
Cousin, M. (Principal Investigator)
1/09/14 → 30/09/18
Project: Research
Profiles
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Michael Cousin
- Deanery of Biomedical Sciences - Personal Chair of Neuronal Cell Biology
- Centre for Discovery Brain Sciences
- Edinburgh Neuroscience
Person: Academic: Research Active