International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jun 2024)

Analysis of Arc/Arg3.1 Oligomerization In Vitro and in Living Cells

  • Barbara Barylko,
  • Clinton A. Taylor,
  • Jason Wang,
  • Per Niklas Hedde,
  • Yan Chen,
  • Kwang-Ho Hur,
  • Derk D. Binns,
  • Chad A. Brautigam,
  • George N. DeMartino,
  • Joachim D. Mueller,
  • David M. Jameson,
  • Joseph P. Albanesi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25126454
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 12
p. 6454

Abstract

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Arc (also known as Arg3.1) is an activity-dependent immediate early gene product enriched in neuronal dendrites. Arc plays essential roles in long-term potentiation, long-term depression, and synaptic scaling. Although its mechanisms of action in these forms of synaptic plasticity are not completely well established, the activities of Arc include the remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton, the facilitation of AMPA receptor (AMPAR) endocytosis, and the regulation of the transcription of AMPAR subunits. In addition, Arc has sequence and structural similarity to retroviral Gag proteins and self-associates into virus-like particles that encapsulate mRNA and perhaps other cargo for intercellular transport. Each of these activities is likely to be influenced by Arc’s reversible self-association into multiple oligomeric species. Here, we used mass photometry to show that Arc exists predominantly as monomers, dimers, and trimers at approximately 20 nM concentration in vitro. Fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy revealed that Arc is almost exclusively present as low-order (monomer to tetramer) oligomers in the cytoplasm of living cells, over a 200 nM to 5 μM concentration range. We also confirmed that an α-helical segment in the N-terminal domain contains essential determinants of Arc’s self-association.

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