Control of hippocampal dendritic spine morphology through ephrin-A3/EphA4 signaling

KK Murai, LN Nguyen, F Irie, Y Yamaguchi… - Nature …, 2003 - nature.com
KK Murai, LN Nguyen, F Irie, Y Yamaguchi, EB Pasquale
Nature neuroscience, 2003nature.com
Communication between glial cells and neurons is emerging as a critical parameter of
synaptic function. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the ability of glial cells to
modify synaptic structure and physiology are poorly understood. Here we describe a
repulsive interaction that regulates postsynaptic morphology through the EphA4 receptor
tyrosine kinase and its ligand ephrin-A3. EphA4 is enriched on dendritic spines of pyramidal
neurons in the adult mouse hippocampus, and ephrin-A3 is localized on astrocytic …
Abstract
Communication between glial cells and neurons is emerging as a critical parameter of synaptic function. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the ability of glial cells to modify synaptic structure and physiology are poorly understood. Here we describe a repulsive interaction that regulates postsynaptic morphology through the EphA4 receptor tyrosine kinase and its ligand ephrin-A3. EphA4 is enriched on dendritic spines of pyramidal neurons in the adult mouse hippocampus, and ephrin-A3 is localized on astrocytic processes that envelop spines. Activation of EphA4 by ephrin-A3 was found to induce spine retraction, whereas inhibiting ephrin/EphA4 interactions distorted spine shape and organization in hippocampal slices. Furthermore, spine irregularities in pyramidal neurons from EphA4 knockout mice and in slices transfected with kinase-inactive EphA4 indicated that ephrin/EphA4 signaling is critical for spine morphology. Thus, our data support a model in which transient interactions between the ephrin-A3 ligand and the EphA4 receptor regulate the structure of excitatory synaptic connections through neuroglial cross-talk.
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