Plk2 promotes synaptic destabilization through disruption of N‐cadherin adhesion complexes during homeostatic adaptation to hyperexcitation

Author:

Abdel‐Ghani Mai1,Lee Yeunkum1,Akli Lyna Ait1,Moran Marielena1,Schneeweis Amanda1,Djemil Sarra1ORCID,El Choueiry Rebecca1,Murtadha Ruqaya1,Pak Daniel T. S.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacology and Physiology Georgetown University Medical Center Washington District of Columbia USA

Abstract

AbstractSynaptogenesis in the brain is highly organized and orchestrated by synaptic cellular adhesion molecules (CAMs) such as N‐cadherin and amyloid precursor protein (APP) that contribute to the stabilization and structure of synapses. Although N‐cadherin plays an integral role in synapse formation and synaptic plasticity, its function in synapse dismantling is not as well understood. Synapse weakening and loss are prominent features of neurodegenerative diseases, and can also be observed during homeostatic compensation to neuronal hyperexcitation. Previously, we have shown that during homeostatic synaptic plasticity, APP is a target for cleavage triggered by phosphorylation by Polo‐like kinase 2 (Plk2). Here, we found that Plk2 directly phosphorylates N‐cadherin, and during neuronal hyperexcitation Plk2 promotes N‐cadherin proteolytic processing, degradation, and disruption of complexes with APP. We further examined the molecular mechanisms underlying N‐cadherin degradation. Loss of N‐cadherin adhesive function destabilizes excitatory synapses and promotes their structural dismantling as a prerequisite to eventual synapse elimination. This pathway, which may normally help to homeostatically restrain excitability, could also shed light on the dysregulated synapse loss that occurs in cognitive disorders.image

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Biochemistry

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