The active zone of presynaptic nerve terminals organizes the neurotransmitter release machinery, thereby enabling fast Ca2+-triggered synaptic vesicle exocytosis. BK-channels are Ca2+-activated large-conductance K+-channels that require close proximity to Ca2+-channels for activation and control Ca2+-triggered neurotransmitter release by accelerating membrane repolarization during action potential firing. How BK-channels are recruited to presynaptic Ca2+-channels, however, is unknown. Here, we show that RBPs (for RIM-binding proteins), which are evolutionarily conserved active zone proteins containing SH3- and FN3-domains, directly bind to BK-channels. We find that RBPs interact with RIMs and Ca2+-channels via their SH3-domains, but to BK-channels via their FN3-domains. Deletion of RBPs in calyx of Held synapses decreased and decelerated presynaptic BK-currents and depleted BK-channels from active zones. Our data suggest that RBPs recruit BK-channels into a RIM-based macromolecular active zone complex that includes Ca2+-channels, synaptic vesicles, and the membrane fusion machinery, thereby enabling tight spatio-temporal coupling of Ca2+-influx to Ca2+-triggered neurotransmitter release in a presynaptic terminal.
CITATION STYLE
Sclip, A., Acuna, C., Luo, F., & Südhof, T. C. (2018). RIM ‐binding proteins recruit BK‐channels to presynaptic release sites adjacent to voltage‐gated Ca 2+ ‐channels. The EMBO Journal, 37(16). https://doi.org/10.15252/embj.201798637
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