Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience (Mar 2023)

Palmitoylation controls the stability of 190 kDa ankyrin-G in dendritic spines and is regulated by ZDHHC8 and lithium

  • Nicolas H. Piguel,
  • Shaun S. Sanders,
  • Francesca I. De Simone,
  • Maria D. Martin-de-Saavedra,
  • Maria D. Martin-de-Saavedra,
  • Emmarose McCoig,
  • Leonardo E. Dionisio,
  • Katharine R. Smith,
  • Gareth M. Thomas,
  • Peter Penzes,
  • Peter Penzes,
  • Peter Penzes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnmol.2023.1144066
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16

Abstract

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IntroductionAnkG, encoded by the ANK3 gene, is a multifunctional scaffold protein with complex isoform expression: the 480 and 270 kDa isoforms have roles at the axon initial segment and node of Ranvier, whereas the 190 kDa isoform (AnkG-190) has an emerging role in the dendritic shaft and spine heads. All isoforms of AnkG undergo palmitoylation, a post-translational modification regulating protein attachment to lipid membranes. However, palmitoylation of AnkG-190 has not been investigated in dendritic spines. The ANK3 gene and altered expression of AnkG proteins are associated with a variety of neuropsychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders including bipolar disorder and are implicated in the lithium response, a commonly used mood stabilizer for bipolar disorder patients, although the precise mechanisms involved are unknown.ResultHere, we showed that Cys70 palmitoylation stabilizes the localization of AnkG-190 in spine heads and at dendritic plasma membrane nanodomains. Mutation of Cys70 impairs AnkG-190 function in dendritic spines and alters PSD-95 scaffolding. Interestingly, we find that lithium reduces AnkG-190 palmitoylation thereby increasing its mobility in dendritic spines. Finally, we demonstrate that the palmitoyl acyl transferase ZDHHC8, but not ZDHHC5, increases AnkG-190 stability in spine heads and is inhibited by lithium.DiscussionTogether, our data reveal that palmitoylation is critical for AnkG-190 localization and function and a potential ZDHHC8/AnkG-190 mechanism linking AnkG-190 mobility to the neuronal effects of lithium.

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