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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (
asymmetrical
)
12,197
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Striatin, a recently isolated rat brain
calmodulin-binding protein
belonging to the WD-repeat protein family, is thought to be part of a calcium signal transduction pathway presumably specific to excitatory synapses, at least in the striatum. This study was aimed to specify the cellular and subcellular localization of striatin, and to determine the possible synaptic relationships between the two main excitatory afferent pathways, arising from the cerebral cortex and the thalamus, and the striatin-containing elements, in the rat striatum. Anterograde tract-tracing by means of biotinylated dextran amine injection in the frontoparietal cerebral cortex or the parafascicular nucleus of the thalamus was combined with immunogold detection of striatin. Striatin-immunoreactivity was confined to the neuronal somatodendritic compartment, including spines. Whereas 90-95% of the striatal neurons were striatin-positive, only about 50% of the sections of dendritic spines engaged in
asymmetrical
synaptic contacts exhibited striatin labelling. Among the sections of striatin-immunopositive dendritic spines, the number of immunogold particles ranged from one to more than seven, indicating an heterogeneity of the spine labelling. Moreover, within each class of spines presenting at least two silver-gold particles, the distribution of the particles varied from a clear-cut alignment under the postsynaptic densities (24-33% of spines) to a location distant from the synaptic area. In the cell bodies and dendrites, striatin labelling was usually not associated with the cytoplasmic membrane nor with the postsynaptic densities. In the striatum ipsilateral to the tracer injections, only 34.8% of the synaptic contacts formed by corticostriatal afferents involved striatin-positive elements (slightly labelled dendritic spines), whereas 56.7% of the synaptic contacts formed by thalamostriatal boutons were made on striatin-positive targets (mostly dendrites). In both cases, striatin labelling was usually not associated with the postsynaptic density. Most of the immunoreactive dendritic spines were in contact with unidentified afferents. These data reveal that striatin is expressed in the vast majority of the cell bodies of striatal spiny neurons, but is heterogeneously distributed among the dendritic spines of those neurons. Data also indicate a preferential relationship between striatin-containing structures and afferents from the parafascicular thalamic nucleus with respect to the frontoparietal cerebral cortex. But, at the dendritic spine level, striatin may be involved in signal transduction mechanisms involving as yet unidentified excitatory afferents to striatal neurons.
...
PMID:Relationships between striatin-containing neurons and cortical or thalamic afferent fibres in the rat striatum. An ultrastructural study by dual labelling. 960 7
Calmodulin (CaM) and
neurogranin
(Ng) are two abundant neuronal proteins in the forebrain whose interactions are implicated in the enhancement of synaptic plasticity. To gain further insight into the actions of these two proteins we investigated whether they co-localize in principle neurons and whether they respond to high frequency stimulation in a coordinated fashion. Immunohistochemical staining of CaM and Ng in mouse hippocampal slices revealed that CaM was highly concentrated in the nucleus of CA1 pyramidal neurons, whereas Ng was more broadly localized throughout the soma and dendrites. The
asymmetrical
localization of CaM in the nucleus of pyramidal neurons was in sharp contrast to the distribution observed in pyramidal cells of the neighboring subiculum, where CaM was uniformly localized throughout the soma and dendrites. The somatic concentrations of CaM and Ng in CA1 pyramidal neurons were approximately 10- and two-fold greater than observed in the dendrites, respectively. High frequency stimulation (HFS) of hippocampal slices promoted mobilization of CaM and Ng from soma to dendrites. These responses were spatially restricted to the area close to the site of stimulation and were inhibited by the N-methyl-D-asparate receptor antagonist 2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid. Furthermore, HFS failed to promote translocation of CaM from soma to dendrites of slices from Ng knockout mice, which also exhibited deficits in HFS-induced long-term potentiation. Translocated CaM and Ng exhibited distinct puncta decorating the apical dendrites of pyramidal neurons and appeared to be concentrated in dendritic spines. These findings suggest that mobilization of CaM and Ng to stimulated dendritic spines may enhance synaptic efficacy by increasing and prolonging the Ca2+ transients and activation of Ca2+/CaM-dependent enzymes.
...
PMID:Stimulation-mediated translocation of calmodulin and neurogranin from soma to dendrites of mouse hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons. 2125 30