Wnt signaling controls multiple biological process, particularly the embryonic development of metazoans. Sustained expression of Wnt signaling components in the mature mammalian CNS and their apparent deregulation in certain neuropathologies suggest that it also plays a part beyond embryonic development to regulate normal brain function. We describe a noncanonical Wnt/Ca signaling cascade that regulates the electrophysiological intrinsic properties of rat neurons, resulting in sustained membrane depolarization and the mobilization of Ca from internal stores. These effects require tyrosine kinase-like orphan receptor 2 (RoR2), activation of PLC, and voltage-gated Ca channels. Activation of this signaling cascade then promotes surface expression of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) through a SNARE-dependent mechanism. This neuronal Wnt/Ca signaling pathway represents a mechanism for Wnt ligands to regulate normal brain processes in the mature animal and provides a framework for understanding how alterations in this pathway may contribute to the etiology of psychiatric disorders where NMDARs are compromised.
Wnt signaling has a well-established role as a regulator of nervous system development, but its role in the maintenance and regulation of established synapses in the mature brain remains poorly understood. At excitatory glutamatergic synapses, NMDA receptors (NMDARs) have a fundamental role in synaptogenesis, synaptic plasticity, and learning and memory; however, it is not known what controls their number and subunit composition. Here we show that the receptor tyrosine kinase-like orphan receptor 2 (RoR2) functions as a Wnt receptor required to maintain basal NMDARmediated synaptic transmission. In addition, RoR2 activation by a noncanonical Wnt ligand activates PKC and JNK and acutely enhances NMDAR synaptic responses. Regulation of a key component of glutamatergic synapses through RoR2 provides a mechanism for Wnt signaling to modulate synaptic transmission, synaptic plasticity, and brain function acutely beyond embryonic development.NMDA receptors | Wnt signaling | synaptic transmission | RoR2 | glutamate receptors
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