SALM 1 controls synapse development by promoting F‐actin/PIP2‐dependent Neurexin clustering

  • Brouwer M
  • Farzana F
  • Koopmans F
  • et al.
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Abstract

Synapse development requires spatiotemporally regulated recruitment of synaptic proteins. In this study, we describe a novel presynaptic mechanism of cis-regulated oligomerization of adhesion molecules that controls synaptogenesis. We identified synaptic adhesion-like molecule 1 (SALM1) as a constituent of the proposed presynaptic Munc18/CASK/Mint1/Lin7b organizer complex. SALM1 preferentially localized to presynaptic compartments of excitatory hippocampal neurons. SALM1 depletion in excitatory hippocampal primary neurons impaired Neurexin1β- and Neuroligin1-mediated excitatory synaptogenesis and reduced synaptic vesicle clustering, synaptic transmission, and synaptic vesicle release. SALM1 promoted Neurexin1β clustering in an F-actin- and PIP2-dependent manner. Two basic residues in SALM1's juxtamembrane polybasic domain are essential for this clustering. Together, these data show that SALM1 is a presynaptic organizer of synapse development by promoting F-actin/PIP2-dependent clustering of Neurexin.

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Brouwer, M., Farzana, F., Koopmans, F., Chen, N., Brunner, J. W., Oldani, S., … Verhage, M. (2019). SALM 1 controls synapse development by promoting F‐actin/PIP2‐dependent Neurexin clustering. The EMBO Journal, 38(17). https://doi.org/10.15252/embj.2018101289

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