iScience (Feb 2021)

Impaired formation of high-order gephyrin oligomers underlies gephyrin dysfunction-associated pathologies

  • Seungjoon Kim,
  • Mooseok Kang,
  • Dongseok Park,
  • Ae-Ree Lee,
  • Heinrich Betz,
  • Jaewon Ko,
  • Iksoo Chang,
  • Ji Won Um

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 2
p. 102037

Abstract

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Summary: Gephyrin is critical for the structure, function, and plasticity of inhibitory synapses. Gephyrin mutations have been linked to various neurological disorders; however, systematic analyses of the functional consequences of these mutations are lacking. Here, we performed molecular dynamics simulations of gephyrin to predict how six reported point mutations might change the structural stability and/or function of gephyrin. Additional in silico analyses revealed that the A91T and G375D mutations reduce the binding free energy of gephyrin oligomer formation. Gephyrin A91T and G375D displayed altered clustering patterns in COS-7 cells and nullified the inhibitory synapse-promoting effect of gephyrin in cultured neurons. However, only the G375D mutation reduced gephyrin interaction with GABAA receptors and neuroligin-2 in mouse brain; it also failed to normalize deficits in GABAergic synapse maintenance and neuronal hyperactivity observed in hippocampal dentate gyrus-specific gephyrin-deficient mice. Our results provide insights into biochemical, cell-biological, and network-activity effects of the pathogenic G375D mutation.

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