Relative contribution of TARPs ?-2 and ?-7 to cerebellar excitatory synaptic transmission and motor behavior.
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ABSTRACT: Transmembrane AMPA receptor regulatory proteins (TARPs) play an essential role in excitatory synaptic transmission throughout the central nervous system (CNS) and exhibit subtype-specific effects on AMPA receptor (AMPAR) trafficking, gating, and pharmacology. The function of TARPs has largely been determined through work on canonical type I TARPs such as stargazin (TARP ?-2), absent in the ataxic stargazer mouse. Little is known about the function of atypical type II TARPs, such as TARP ?-7, which exhibits variable effects on AMPAR function. Because ?-2 and ?-7 are both strongly expressed in multiple cell types in the cerebellum, we examined the relative contribution of ?-2 and ?-7 to both synaptic transmission in the cerebellum and motor behavior by using both the stargazer mouse and a ?-7 knockout (KO) mouse. We found that the loss of ?-7 alone had little effect on climbing fiber (cf) responses in Purkinje neurons (PCs), yet the additional loss of ?-2 all but abolished cf responses. In contrast, ?-7 failed to make a significant contribution to excitatory transmission in stellate cells and granule cells. In addition, we generated a PC-specific deletion of ?-2, with and without ?-7 KO background, to examine the relative contribution of ?-2 and ?-7 to PC-dependent motor behavior. Selective deletion of ?-2 in PCs had little effect on motor behavior, yet the additional loss of ?-7 resulted in a severe disruption in motor behavior. Thus, ?-7 is capable of supporting a component of excitatory transmission in PCs, sufficient to maintain essentially normal motor behavior, in the absence of ?-2.
SUBMITTER: Yamazaki M
PROVIDER: S-EPMC4313851 | biostudies-other | 2015 Jan
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other
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