Proton-triggered rearrangement of the AMPA receptor N-terminal domains impacts receptor kinetics and synaptic localization.
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Abstract
AMPA glutamate receptors (AMPARs) are ion channel tetramers that mediate the majority of fast excitatory synaptic transmission. They are composed of four subunits (GluA1-GluA4); the GluA2 subunit dominates AMPAR function throughout the forebrain. Its extracellular N-terminal domain (NTD) determines receptor localization at the synapse, ensuring reliable synaptic transmission and plasticity. This synaptic anchoring function requires a compact NTD tier, stabilized by a GluA2-specific NTD interface. Here we show that low pH conditions, which accompany synaptic activity, rupture this interface. All-atom molecular dynamics simulations reveal that protonation of an interfacial histidine residue (H208) centrally contributes to NTD rearrangement. Moreover, in stark contrast to their canonical compact arrangement at neutral pH, GluA2 cryo-electron microscopy structures exhibit a wide spectrum of NTD conformations under acidic conditions. We show that the consequences of this pH-dependent conformational control are twofold: rupture of the NTD tier slows recovery from desensitized states and increases receptor mobility at mouse hippocampal synapses. Therefore, a proton-triggered NTD switch will shape both AMPAR location and kinetics, thereby impacting synaptic signal transmission.
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Acknowledgements: We thank C. Johnson for running the MALS experiment, N. Barry and J. Boulanger for helpful comments on FRAP imaging and analysis, R. Lape for providing the NSFA script and J.-N. Dohrke for helpful suggestions concerning the MD simulations. We also thank the Greger lab, J. Krieger and J. Watson for comments on the paper. We acknowledge the technical support provided by the Laboratory of Molecular Biology (LMB) Biophysics Facility, the Ares Biomedical Facility, LMB scientific computing and the LMB EM Facility. We acknowledge the use of the cryo-EM facility at the Center for Structural Biology (maintained by M. Chambers, S. Collier and M. Haider), ACCRE graphics processing unit nodes (supported by National Institutes of Health grant 1S10OD032234-01) and the Distributed Online Research Storage core at Vanderbilt University. We thank K. Kim and P. Christov at the Vanderbilt Chemical Synthesis Core for synthesizing chemicals. This work was supported by grants from the Medical Research Council (MC_U105174197), the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/N002113/1) and the Wellcome Trust (223194/Z/21/Z) to I.H.G. and NIH grants (R56/R01MH123474 and S10OD030292-01) to T.N.
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1545-9985

