1. Academic Validation
  2. The GDP-GTP exchange factor collybistin: an essential determinant of neuronal gephyrin clustering

The GDP-GTP exchange factor collybistin: an essential determinant of neuronal gephyrin clustering

  • J Neurosci. 2004 Jun 23;24(25):5816-26. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1184-04.2004.
Kirsten Harvey 1 Ian C Duguid Melissa J Alldred Sarah E Beatty Hamish Ward Nicholas H Keep Sue E Lingenfelter Brian R Pearce Johan Lundgren Michael J Owen Trevor G Smart Bernhard Lüscher Mark I Rees Robert J Harvey
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Pharmacology, The School of Pharmacy, London WC1N 1AX, United Kingdom. [email protected]
Abstract

Glycine receptors (GlyRs) and specific subtypes of GABA(A) receptors are clustered at synapses by the multidomain protein gephyrin, which in turn is translocated to the cell membrane by the GDP-GTP exchange factor collybistin. We report the characterization of several new variants of collybistin, which are created by alternative splicing of exons encoding an N-terminal Src homology 3 (SH3) domain and three alternate C termini (CB1, CB2, and CB3). The presence of the SH3 domain negatively regulates the ability of collybistin to translocate gephyrin to submembrane microaggregates in transfected mammalian cells. Because the majority of native collybistin isoforms appear to harbor the SH3 domain, this suggests that collybistin activity may be regulated by protein-protein interactions at the SH3 domain. We localized the binding sites for collybistin and the GlyR beta subunit to the C-terminal MoeA homology domain of gephyrin and show that multimerization of this domain is required for collybistin-gephyrin and GlyR-gephyrin interactions. We also demonstrate that gephyrin clustering in recombinant systems and cultured neurons requires both collybistin-gephyrin interactions and an intact collybistin pleckstrin homology domain. The vital importance of collybistin for inhibitory synaptogenesis is underlined by the discovery of a mutation (G55A) in exon 2 of the human collybistin gene (ARHGEF9) in a patient with clinical symptoms of both hyperekplexia and epilepsy. The clinical manifestation of this collybistin missense mutation may result, at least in part, from mislocalization of gephyrin and a major GABA(A) receptor subtype.

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