The Susd2 protein regulates neurite growth and excitatory synaptic density in hippocampal cultures
Autor: | Yann Nadjar, Jean-Louis Bessereau, Andréa Dumoulin, Antoine Triller |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Cell Adhesion Molecules
Neuronal Neurogenesis Synaptogenesis Hippocampus Hippocampal formation Biology Rats Sprague-Dawley Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience medicine Neurites Animals Humans RNA Messenger Axon Molecular Biology Cells Cultured Messenger RNA Membrane Glycoproteins Cell Biology Transmembrane protein Cell biology Rats medicine.anatomical_structure HEK293 Cells Synapses Excitatory postsynaptic potential biology.protein Neuroscience Complement control protein |
Zdroj: | Molecular and cellular neurosciences. 65 |
ISSN: | 1095-9327 |
Popis: | Complement control protein (CCP) domains have adhesion properties and are commonly found in proteins that control the complement immune system. However, an increasing number of proteins containing CCP domains have been reported to display neuronal functions. Susd2 is a transmembrane protein containing one CCP domain. It was previously identified as a tumor-reversing protein, but has no characterized function in the CNS. The present study investigates the expression and function of Susd2 in the rat hippocampus. Characterization of Susd2 during development showed a peak in mRNA expression two weeks after birth. In hippocampal neuronal cultures, the same expression profile was observed at 15days in vitro for both mRNA and protein, a time consistent with synaptogenesis in our model. At the subcellular level, Susd2 was located on the soma, axons and dendrites, and appeared to associate preferentially with excitatory synapses. Inhibition of Susd2 by shRNAs led to decreased numbers of excitatory synaptic profiles, exclusively. Also, morphological parameters were studied on young (5DIV) developing neurons. After Susd2 inhibition, an increase in dendritic tree length but a decrease in axon elongation were observed, suggesting changes in adhesion properties. Our results demonstrate a dual role for Susd2 at different developmental stages, and raise the question whether Susd2 and other CCP-containing proteins expressed in the CNS could be function-related. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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