Arc Requires PSD95 for Assembly into Postsynaptic Complexes Involved with Neural Dysfunction and Intelligence.

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Date
2017-10-17ICR Author
Author
Fernández, E
Collins, MO
Frank, RAW
Zhu, F
Kopanitsa, MV
Nithianantharajah, J
Lemprière, SA
Fricker, D
Elsegood, KA
McLaughlin, CL
Croning, MDR
Mclean, C
Armstrong, JD
Hill, WD
Deary, IJ
Cencelli, G
Bagni, C
Fromer, M
Purcell, SM
Pocklington, AJ
Choudhary, JS
Komiyama, NH
Grant, SGN
Type
Journal Article
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Arc is an activity-regulated neuronal protein, but little is known about its interactions, assembly into multiprotein complexes, and role in human disease and cognition. We applied an integrated proteomic and genetic strategy by targeting a tandem affinity purification (TAP) tag and Venus fluorescent protein into the endogenous Arc gene in mice. This allowed biochemical and proteomic characterization of native complexes in wild-type and knockout mice. We identified many Arc-interacting proteins, of which PSD95 was the most abundant. PSD95 was essential for Arc assembly into 1.5-MDa complexes and activity-dependent recruitment to excitatory synapses. Integrating human genetic data with proteomic data showed that Arc-PSD95 complexes are enriched in schizophrenia, intellectual disability, autism, and epilepsy mutations and normal variants in intelligence. We propose that Arc-PSD95 postsynaptic complexes potentially affect human cognitive function.
Collections
Subject
Nervous System
Synapses
Animals
Mice, Knockout
Humans
Cytoskeletal Proteins
Nerve Tissue Proteins
Intelligence
Proteomics
Gene Knock-In Techniques
Disks Large Homolog 4 Protein
Language
eng
Date accepted
2017-09-13
License start date
2017-10
Citation
Cell reports, 2017, 21 (3), pp. 679 - 691
Publisher
CELL PRESS