Abstract
The precise orchestration of synaptic differentiation is critical for efficient information exchange in the nervous system. The nerve-muscle synapse forms in response to agrin, which is secreted from the motor nerve terminal and induces the clustering of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) and other elements of the postsynaptic apparatus on the subjacent muscle cell surface. In view of the highly restricted spatial localization and the plasticity of neuromuscular junctions, it seems likely that synapse formation and maintenance are regulated by additional, as-yet-unidentified factors. Here, we tested whether neurotrophins modulate the agrin-induced differentiation of postsynaptic specializations. We show that both brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and neurotrophin-4 (NT-4) inhibit agrin-induced AChR clustering on cultured myotubes. Nerve growth factor and NT-3 are without effect. Muscle cells express full-length TrkB, the cognate receptor for BDNF and NT-4. Direct activation of this receptor by anti-TrkB antibodies mimicked the BDNF/NT-4 inhibition of agrin-induced AChR clustering. This BDNF/NT-4 inhibition is likely to be an intrinsic mechanism for regulating AChR clustering, because neutralization of endogenous TrkB ligands resulted in elevated levels of AChR clustering even in the absence of added agrin. Finally, high concentrations of agrin can occlude the BDNF/NT-4 inhibition of AChR clustering. These results indicate that an interplay between agrin and neurotrophins can regulate the formation of postsynaptic specializations. They also suggest a mechanism for the suppression of postsynaptic specializations at nonjunctional regions.
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