Abstract

The signalling protein PKCγ is a major regulator of Purkinje cell development and synaptic function. We have shown previously that increased PKCγ activity impairs dendritic development of cerebellar Purkinje cells. Mutations in the protein kinase Cγ gene (PRKCG) cause spinocerebellar ataxia type 14 (SCA14). In a transgenic mouse model of SCA14 expressing the human S361G mutation, Purkinje cell dendritic development is impaired in cerebellar slice cultures similar to pharmacological activation of PKC. The mechanisms of PKCγ-driven inhibition of dendritic growth are still unclear. Using immunoprecipitation-coupled mass spectrometry analysis, we have identified collapsin response mediator protein 2 (CRMP2) as a protein interacting with constitutive active PKCγ(S361G) and confirmed the interaction with the Duolink™ proximity ligation assay. We show that in cerebellar slice cultures from PKCγ(S361G)-mice, phosphorylation of CRMP2 at the known PKC target site Thr555 is increased in Purkinje cells confirming phosphorylation of CRMP2 by PKCγ. miRNA-mediated CRMP2 knockdown decreased Purkinje cell dendritic outgrowth in dissociated cerebellar cultures as did the transfection of CRMP2 mutants with a modified Thr555 site. In contrast, dendritic development was normal after wild-type CRMP2 overexpression. In a novel knock-in mouse expressing only the phospho-defective T555A-mutant CRMP2, Purkinje cell dendritic development was reduced in dissociated cultures. This reduction could be rescued by transfecting wild-type CRMP2 but only partially by the phospho-mimetic T555D-mutant. Our findings establish CRMP2 as an important target of PKCγ phosphorylation in Purkinje cells mediating its control of dendritic development. Dynamic regulation of CRMP2 phosphorylation via PKCγ is required for its correct function.

Highlights

  • The protein kinase C family comprises several isoforms of serine/threonine kinases expressed in a variety of tissues where they are involved in a multitude of signalling cascades

  • Amongst the proteins co-purified from PKCγ(S361G)-lysates, we identified collapsin response mediator protein 2 (CRMP2)

  • Since Purkinje cell dendritic development is impaired in PKCγ(S361G)-mice, we investigated the relationship between the phosphorylation of CRMP2 and dendritic outgrowth and created constructs for the expression of phospho-defective (T555A) and phospho-mimetic (T555D) mutants of CRMP2

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Summary

Introduction

The protein kinase C family comprises several isoforms of serine/threonine kinases expressed in a variety of tissues where they are involved in a multitude of signalling cascades. PKCγ is one of the classical PKC isozymes, which are activated by binding diacylglycerol and calcium. It is expressed exclusively in neurons of the central nervous system and in the cerebellum where it is strongly and expressed in Purkinje cells [1]. Mutations in the PRKCG gene coding for PKCγ are associated with Purkinje cells loss and impaired motor functions in spinocerebellar ataxia 14 (SCA14). More than 40 mutations in the PRKCG gene are known to cause SCA14 [4, 5] Most of these mutations were shown to have an increased kinase activity in vitro [6, 7]. In a transgenic mouse model in which the human S361G point mutation associated with SCA14 is expressed in cerebellar Purkinje cells (PKCγ(S361G)-mice) [8], the mice develop mild symptoms of cerebellar ataxia and show decreased dendritic development of Purkinje cells throughout

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