Abstract
Assembly and trafficking of neurotransmitter receptors are processes contingent upon interactions between intracellular chaperone systems and discrete determinants in the receptor proteins. Kainate receptor subunits, which form ionotropic glutamate receptors with diverse roles in the central nervous system, contain a variety of trafficking determinants that promote either membrane expression or intracellular sequestration. In this report, we identify the coatomer protein complex I (COPI) vesicle coat as a critical mechanism for retention of the kainate receptor subunit KA2 in the endoplasmic reticulum. COPI subunits immunoprecipitated with KA2 subunits from both cerebellum and COS-7 cells, and beta-COP protein interacted directly with immobilized KA2 peptides containing the arginine-rich retention/retrieval determinant. Association between COPI proteins and KA2 subunits was significantly reduced upon alanine substitution of this signal in the cytoplasmic tail of KA2. Temperature-sensitive degradation of COPI complex proteins was correlated with an increase in plasma membrane localization of the homologous KA2 receptor. Assembly of heteromeric GluR6a/KA2 receptors markedly reduced association of KA2 and COPI. Finally, the reduction in COPI binding was correlated with an increased association with 14-3-3 proteins, which mediate forward trafficking of other integral signaling proteins. These interactions therefore represent a critical early checkpoint for biosynthesis of functional KARs.
Highlights
Kainate receptors (KARs)2 play a variety of roles in the mammalian central nervous system that include contributions to postsynaptic neurotransmission at a subset of excitatory synapses and presynaptic modulation of both excitatory and inhibitory transmission [1, 2]
To determine whether complex I (COPI) proteins subserve a retention/retrieval function for the KA2 kainate receptor subunit, we first tested for a biochemical interaction between KA2 subunits and members of the COPI complex in transfected COS-7 cells
These receptors do not form functional glutamate receptors when expressed on the plasma membrane, and retention of these subunits contributes to the assembly of appropriately functional heteromeric channels when other KAR subunits are expressed
Summary
Kainate receptors (KARs)2 play a variety of roles in the mammalian central nervous system that include contributions to postsynaptic neurotransmission at a subset of excitatory synapses and presynaptic modulation of both excitatory and inhibitory transmission [1, 2]. COPI subunits immunoprecipitated with KA2 subunits from both cerebellum and COS-7 cells, and -COP protein interacted directly with immobilized KA2 peptides containing the arginine-rich retention/retrieval determinant.
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