The SMA Modifier Plastin 3 Targets Cell Membrane-Associated Proteins in Motoneurons

Neurosci Insights. 2024 Jan 19:19:26331055241226623. doi: 10.1177/26331055241226623. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Loss of the Survival Motor Neuron (SMN) gene inevitably leads to spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), one of the most common fatal neuromuscular diseases in children with FDA and EMA approved therapies. However, the cellular mechanisms leading to neuromuscular junction (NMJ) dysfunction due to impaired Ca2+ homeostasis in the presynaptic compartment remain largely unexplained. In the last decade, the so-called SMA modifiers have gained attention. The F-actin bundler Plastin 3 (PLS3) is one of them and counteracts neurotransmission defects, including altered vesicle endocytosis, in Smn-deficient NMJs. Properly bundled F-actin is the basis for the translocation and arrangement of transmembrane proteins at the cell surface. Our recently published data by Hennlein et al., J Cell Biol. (2023) clearly showed that Smn deficiency impairs the F-actin dependent translocation of the high-affinity BDNF receptor TrkB to the cell surface resulting in reduced BDNF-mediated TrkB activation in motor axon terminals. Strikingly, the overexpression of PLS3 restores TrkB availability, and significantly improves the clustering of the active zone-associated voltage-gated calcium channel Cav2.2 in growth cones of Smn-deficient motoneurons. These observations raise the question of how PLS3 mediates the proper cell surface localization and cluster-like formation of Cav2.2 in motor axon terminals.

Keywords: 3D cell culture; BDNF/TrkB; Cacna2d2; Cav2.2; Plastin 3; motoneuron; spinal muscular atrophy.

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