Abstract
Neurexins (NRXs) and neuroligins are key synaptic adhesion molecules that also recruit synaptic signaling machineries. Neurexins consist of α- and β-isoforms, but how they couple synaptic transmission and adhesion to regulate activity-dependent synapse development remains unclear, in part because of poor understanding of their cell biology and regulation in the relevant neurons. Here, we examined the subaxonal localization, dynamics, and regulation of NRX1α and NRX1β in cortical perisomatic inhibitory synapses. Both isoforms are delivered to presynaptic terminals but show significant and different turnover rate at the membrane. Although NRX1α is highly diffuse along developing axons and filopodia, NRX1β is strictly anchored at terminals through binding to postsynaptic ligands. The turnover rate of NRX1β is attenuated by neural activity and presynaptic GABAB receptors. NRXs, thus, are intrinsically dynamic but are stabilized by local transmitter release. Such an activity-adjusted adhesion system seems ideally suited to rapidly explore and validate synaptic partners guided by synaptic transmission.
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Fu, Y., & Huang, Z. J. (2010). Differential dynamics and activity-dependent regulation of α- and β-neurexins at developing GABAergic synapses. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 107(52), 22699–22704. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1011233108
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