Porcupine Controls Hippocampal AMPAR Levels, Composition, and Synaptic Transmission

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Abstract

AMPA receptor (AMPAR) complexes contain auxiliary subunits that modulate receptor trafficking and gating. In addition to the transmembrane AMPAR regulatory proteins (TARPs) and cornichons (CNIH-2/3), recent proteomic studies identified a diverse array of additional AMPAR-associated transmembrane and secreted partners. We systematically surveyed these and found that PORCN and ABHD6 increase GluA1 levels in transfected cells. Knockdown of PORCN in rat hippocampal neurons, which express it in high amounts, selectively reduces levels of all tested AMPAR complex components. Regulation of AMPARs is independent of PORCN's membrane-associated O-acyl transferase activity. PORCN knockdown in hippocampal neurons decreases AMPAR currents and accelerates desensitization and leads to depletion of TARP γ-from AMPAR complexes.

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Erlenhardt, N., Yu, H., Abiraman, K., Yamasaki, T., Wadiche, J. I., Tomita, S., & Bredt, D. S. (2016). Porcupine Controls Hippocampal AMPAR Levels, Composition, and Synaptic Transmission. Cell Reports, 14(4), 782–794. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2015.12.078

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