Abstract

The transmembrane protein plasticity-related genes 3 and 5 (PRG3 and PRG5) increase filopodial formation in various cell lines, independently of Cdc42. However, information on the effects of PRG5 during neuronal development is sparse. Here, we present several lines of evidence for the involvement of PRG5 in the genesis and stabilization of dendritic spines. First, PRG5 was strongly expressed during mouse brain development from embryonic day 14 (E14), peaked around the time of birth, and remained stable at least until early adult stages (i.e. P30). Second, on a subcellular level, PRG5 expression shifted from an equal distribution along all neurites toward accumulation only along dendrites during hippocampal development in vitro. Third, overexpression of PRG5 in immature hippocampal neurons induced formation of spine-like structures ahead of time. Proper amino acid sequences in the extracellular domains (D1 to D3) of PRG5 were a prerequisite for trafficking and induction of spine-like structures, as shown by mutation analysis. Fourth, at stages when spines are present, knockdown of PRG5 reduced the number but not the length of protrusions. This was accompanied by a decrease in the number of excitatory synapses and, consequently, by a reduction of miniature excitatory postsynaptic current frequencies, although miniature excitatory postsynaptic current amplitudes remained similar. In turn, overexpressing PRG5 in mature neurons not only increased Homer-positive spine numbers but also augmented spine head diameters. Mechanistically, PRG5 interacts with phosphorylated phosphatidylinositols, phospholipids involved in dendritic spine formation by different lipid-protein assays. Taken together, our data propose that PRG5 promotes spine formation.

Highlights

  • Plasticity-related gene 5 (PRG5) is prominently expressed in neurons, but its neuronal function is unknown

  • Because PRG5 was previously shown to be strongly expressed in the hippocampal region [15], we evaluated PRG5 mRNA expression during hippocampal development (Fig. 1B)

  • In line with above results, the PRG5-⌬ C-terminal FLAG did not alter the morphology of neuritis, the whole PRG5 overexpression led to the appearance of the spine-like structures along the neurite, as we observed by immunocytochemistry (Fig. 6E)

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Summary

Background

Plasticity-related gene 5 (PRG5) is prominently expressed in neurons, but its neuronal function is unknown. Results: PRG5 overexpression prematurely induces spine-like structures in immature hippocampal neurons, and PRG5 knockdown causes functionally relevant loss of excitatory synapses in dendrites of more mature neurons. PRG5 Promotes Dendritic Spine Formation lipid phosphatase-related proteins) and, in the case of PRG5, referred as phosphatidic acid phosphatase type 2D (PAP2D)) [17,18,19,20]. They are differentially expressed in the developing brain and regulated after brain injury [21, 22]. Down-regulation of the endogenous expression level of PRG5 in more mature cultured hippocampal neurons reduced the density of excitatory synapses and, the frequency of mEPSCs

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