BackgroundPhospholipase D (PLD) catalyzes conversion of phosphatidylcholine into choline and phosphatidic acid, leading to a variety of intracellular signal transduction events. Two classical PLDs, PLD1 and PLD2, contain phosphatidylinositide-binding PX and PH domains and two conserved His-x-Lys-(x)4-Asp (HKD) motifs, which are critical for PLD activity. PLD4 officially belongs to the PLD family, because it possesses two HKD motifs. However, it lacks PX and PH domains and has a putative transmembrane domain instead. Nevertheless, little is known regarding expression, structure, and function of PLD4.Methodology/Principal FindingsPLD4 was analyzed in terms of expression, structure, and function. Expression was analyzed in developing mouse brains and non-neuronal tissues using microarray, in situ hybridization, immunohistochemistry, and immunocytochemistry. Structure was evaluated using bioinformatics analysis of protein domains, biochemical analyses of transmembrane property, and enzymatic deglycosylation. PLD activity was examined by choline release and transphosphatidylation assays. Results demonstrated low to modest, but characteristic, PLD4 mRNA expression in a subset of cells preferentially localized around white matter regions, including the corpus callosum and cerebellar white matter, during the first postnatal week. These PLD4 mRNA-expressing cells were identified as Iba1-positive microglia. In non-neuronal tissues, PLD4 mRNA expression was widespread, but predominantly distributed in the spleen. Intense PLD4 expression was detected around the marginal zone of the splenic red pulp, and splenic PLD4 protein recovered from subcellular membrane fractions was highly N-glycosylated. PLD4 was heterologously expressed in cell lines and localized in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus. Moreover, heterologously expressed PLD4 proteins did not exhibit PLD enzymatic activity.Conclusions/SignificanceResults showed that PLD4 is a non-PLD, HKD motif-carrying, transmembrane glycoprotein localized in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus. The spatiotemporally restricted expression patterns suggested that PLD4 might play a role in common function(s) among microglia during early postnatal brain development and splenic marginal zone cells.
Ca2؉ -dependent activator protein for secretion (CAPS) regulates exocytosis of catecholamine-or neuropeptide-containing dense-core vesicles (DCVs) at secretion sites, such as nerve terminals. However, large amounts of CAPS protein are localized in the cell soma, and the role of somal CAPS protein remains unclear. The present study shows that somal CAPS1 plays an important role in DCV trafficking in the trans-Golgi network. The anti-CAPS1 antibody appeared to pull down membrane fractions, including many Golgi-associated proteins, such as ADP-ribosylation factor (ARF) small GTPases. Biochemical analyses of the protein-protein interaction showed that CAPS1 interacted specifically with the class II ARF4/ARF5, but not with other classes of ARFs, via the pleckstrin homology domain in a GDP-bound ARF form-specific manner. The pleckstrin homology domain of CAPS1 showed high affinity for the Golgi membrane, thereby recruiting ARF4/ARF5 to the Golgi complex. Knockdown of either CAPS1 or ARF4/ARF5 expression caused accumulation of chromogranin, a DCV marker protein, in the Golgi, thereby reducing its DCV secretion. In addition, the overexpression of CAPS1 binding-deficient ARF5 mutants induced aberrant chromogranin accumulation in the Golgi and consequently reduced its DCV secretion. These findings implicate a functional role for CAPS1 protein in the soma, a major subcellular localization site of CAPS1 in many cell types, in regulating DCV trafficking in the trans-Golgi network; this activity occurs via protein-protein interaction with ARF4/ARF5 in a GDP-dependent manner.
Ca 2+-dependent activator protein for secretion 2 (CAPS2 or CADPS2) potently promotes the release of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). A rare splicing form of CAPS2 with deletion of exon3 (dex3) was identified to be overrepresented in some patients with autism. Here, we generated Caps2-dex3 mice and verified a severe impairment in axonal Caps2-dex3 localization, contributing to a reduction in BDNF release from axons. In addition, circuit connectivity, measured by spine and interneuron density, was diminished globally. The collective effect of reduced axonal BDNF release during development was a striking and selective repertoire of deficits in socialand anxiety-related behaviors. Together, these findings represent a unique mouse model of a molecular mechanism linking BDNFmediated coordination of brain development to autism-related behaviors and patient genotype.-dependent activator protein for secretion 2 (CAPS2 or CADPS2) is a member of the CAPS protein family that regulates the trafficking of dense-core vesicles by binding both phosphoinositides and dense-core vesicles (1-5). We initially identified mouse Caps2 as a potent factor promoting the release of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) during cerebellar development (6, 7). Our subsequent knockout mouse study showed that Caps2 not only plays a role in neuronal development of the cerebrum and hippocampus as well as the cerebellum, but that it is also associated with social interaction, anxiety, and maternal and circadian behaviors in mice (7,8). We also showed that the expression of an exon 3-skipped (or -spliced out) form of CAPS2 (designated CAPS2-dex3) (8), which is now known to be a rare alternative splicing variant (9, 10), is increased in a subgroup of patients with autism and is not properly localized in axons (8). Thus, neurons overexpressing dex3 may fail to coordinate local BDNF release from axons properly (8, 9), resulting in improper brain development and function. The human CAPS2 gene locus (7q31.32) is intriguingly located within the autism susceptibility locus 1 (AUTS1) (11) on chromosome 7q31-q33, one of several susceptibility loci for autism (12). Moreover, an association of CAPS2 with autism has been suggested recently, not only by the presence of copy number variations in the CAPS2 gene in autistic patients (13-15), but also by decreased transcription of CAPS2 in the brains of people with autism (16). Thus, clarifying the biological significance of dex3 expression is an important step in elucidating the association of CAPS2 with brain circuit development and behaviors related to autism.The potential molecular risk factors for autism susceptibility have been increasingly reported (17-26) but are poorly characterized in animal models. In this report, we generated a mouse model expressing dex3 and analyzed the cellular and autistic-like behavioral phenotypes of dex3 mice. Our results support the involvement of the rare dex3 form of Caps2 in defective axonal BDNF secretion, affecting proper brain circuit development and/ or functio...
Evidence that glutamate and ATP release from astrocytes can occur via gap junction hemichannels (GJHCs) is accumulating. However, the GJHC is still only one possible release mechanism and has not been detected in some studies, although this may be because the levels were below those detectable by the system used. Because of these conflicting results, we hypothesized that release from astrocyte GJHCs might depend on different astrocyte states, and screened for factors affecting astrocyte GJHC activity by measuring fluorescent dye leakage via GJHCs using a conventional method for GJHC acivation, i.e. removal of extracellular divalent cations. Astrocytes cultured in Dulbecco's minimal essential medium containing 10% fetal calf serum, a medium widely used for astrocyte studies, did not show dye leakage, whereas those cultured in a defined medium showed substantial dye leakage, which was confirmed pharmacologically to be due to GJHCs and not to P2x7 receptors. EGF and bFGF inhibited the GJHC activity via the mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade, and the effect of the growth factors was reversed by interleukin-1beta. These factors altered GJHC activity within 10 min, but did not affect connexin 43 expression. GJHC activity in hippocampal slice culture preparations was measured using the same methods and found to be regulated in a similar manner. These results indicate that astrocyte GJHC activity is regulated by brain environmental factors.
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