eLife (May 2020)

Parkin contributes to synaptic vesicle autophagy in Bassoon-deficient mice

  • Sheila Hoffmann-Conaway,
  • Marisa M Brockmann,
  • Katharina Schneider,
  • Anil Annamneedi,
  • Kazi Atikur Rahman,
  • Christine Bruns,
  • Kathrin Textoris-Taube,
  • Thorsten Trimbuch,
  • Karl-Heinz Smalla,
  • Christian Rosenmund,
  • Eckart D Gundelfinger,
  • Craig Curtis Garner,
  • Carolina Montenegro-Venegas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.56590
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

Read online

Mechanisms regulating the turnover of synaptic vesicle (SV) proteins are not well understood. They are thought to require poly-ubiquitination and degradation through proteasome, endo-lysosomal or autophagy-related pathways. Bassoon was shown to negatively regulate presynaptic autophagy in part by scaffolding Atg5. Here, we show that increased autophagy in Bassoon knockout neurons depends on poly-ubiquitination and that the loss of Bassoon leads to elevated levels of ubiquitinated synaptic proteins per se. Our data show that Bassoon knockout neurons have a smaller SV pool size and a higher turnover rate as indicated by a younger pool of SV2. The E3 ligase Parkin is required for increased autophagy in Bassoon-deficient neurons as the knockdown of Parkin normalized autophagy and SV protein levels and rescued impaired SV recycling. These data indicate that Bassoon is a key regulator of SV proteostasis and that Parkin is a key E3 ligase in the autophagy-mediated clearance of SV proteins.

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