Nogo-A controls structural plasticity at dendritic spines by rapidly modulating actin dynamics
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2016-06
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taverne
Abstract
Nogo-A and its receptors have been shown to control synaptic plasticity, including negatively regulating long-term potentiation (LTP) in the cortex and hippocampus at a fast time scale and restraining experience-dependent turnover of dendritic spines over days. However, the molecular mechanisms and the precise time course mediating these actions of Nogo-A are largely unexplored. Here we show that Nogo-A signaling in the adult nervous system rapidly modulates the spine actin cytoskeleton within minutes to control structural plasticity at dendritic spines of CA3 pyramidal neurons. Indeed, acute Nogo-A loss-of-function transiently increases F-actin stability and results in an increase in dendritic spine density and length. In addition, Nogo-A acutely restricts AMPAR insertion and mEPSC amplitude at hippocampal synaptic sites. These data indicate a crucial function of Nogo-A in modulating the very tight balance between plasticity and stability of the neuronal circuitry underlying learning processes and the ability to store long-term information in the mature CNS. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Keywords
actin cytoskeleton, AMPA receptor insertion, FRAP, neurite-growth inhibitors, structural plasticity, Taverne
Citation
Kellner, Y, Fricke, S, Kramer, S, Iobbi, C, Wierenga, C J, Schwab, M E, Korte, M & Zagrebelsky, M 2016, 'Nogo-A controls structural plasticity at dendritic spines by rapidly modulating actin dynamics', Hippocampus, vol. 26, no. 6, pp. 816-831. https://doi.org/10.1002/hipo.22565