Cell Reports (Feb 2024)

Mechanistic and structural studies reveal NRAP-1-dependent coincident activation of NMDARs

  • Dayton J. Goodell,
  • Frank G. Whitby,
  • Jerry E. Mellem,
  • Ning Lei,
  • Penelope J. Brockie,
  • Aleksander J. Maricq,
  • Debra M. Eckert,
  • Christopher P. Hill,
  • David M. Madsen,
  • Andres V. Maricq

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 2
p. 113694

Abstract

Read online

Summary: N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)-type ionotropic glutamate receptors have essential roles in neurotransmission and synaptic plasticity. Previously, we identified an evolutionarily conserved protein, NRAP-1, that is required for NMDA receptor (NMDAR) function in C. elegans. Here, we demonstrate that NRAP-1 was sufficient to gate NMDARs and greatly enhanced glutamate-mediated NMDAR gating, thus conferring coincident activation properties to the NMDAR. Intriguingly, vertebrate NMDARs—and chimeric NMDARs where the amino-terminal domain (ATD) of C. elegans NMDARs was replaced by the ATD from vertebrate receptors—were spontaneously active when ectopically expressed in C. elegans neurons. Thus, the ATD is a primary determinant of NRAP-1- and glutamate-mediated gating of NMDARs. We determined the crystal structure of NRAP-1 at 1.9-Å resolution, which revealed two distinct domains positioned around a central low-density lipoprotein receptor class A domain. The NRAP-1 structure, combined with chimeric and mutational analyses, suggests a model where the three NRAP-1 domains work cooperatively to modify the gating of NMDARs.

Keywords