Glial expression of the caenorhabditis elegans gene swip-10 supports glutamate dependent control of extrasynaptic dopamine signaling.

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Abstract

Glial cells play a critical role in shaping neuronal development, structure, and function. In a screen for Caenorhabditis elegans mutants that display dopamine (DA)-dependent, Swimming-Induced Paralysis (Swip), we identified a novel gene, swip-10, the expression of which in glia is required to support normal swimming behavior. swip-10 mutants display reduced locomotion rates on plates, consistent with our findings of elevated rates of presynapticDAvesicle fusion using fluorescence recovery after photobleaching. In addition, swip-10 mutants exhibit elevated DA neuron excitability upon contact with food, as detected by in vivoCa2+monitoring, that can be rescued by glial expression of swip-10. Mammalian glia exert powerful control of neuronal excitability via transporter-dependent buffering of extracellular glutamate (Glu). Consistent with this idea, swip-10 paralysis was blunted in mutants deficient in either vesicular Glu release or Glu receptor expression and could be phenocopied by mutations that disrupt the function of plasma membrane Glu transporters, most noticeably glt-1, the ortholog of mammalian astrocytic GLT1 (EAAT2). swip-10 encodes a protein containing a highly conserved metallo- β-lactamase domain, within which our swip-10 mutations are located and where engineered mutations disrupt Swip rescue. Sequence alignments identify the CNS-expressed gene MBLAC1 as a putative mammalian ortholog. Together, our studies provide evidence of a novel pathway in glial cells regulated by swip-10 that limits DA neuron excitability, DA secretion, and DA-dependent behaviors through modulation of Glu signaling.

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Andrew Hardaway, J., Sturgeon, S. M., Snarrenberg, C. L., Li, Z., Shawn Xu, X. Z., Bermingham, D. P., … Blakely, R. D. (2015). Glial expression of the caenorhabditis elegans gene swip-10 supports glutamate dependent control of extrasynaptic dopamine signaling. Journal of Neuroscience, 35(25), 9409–9423. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0800-15.2015

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