Activation of a DNA Damage Checkpoint Response in a TAF1-Defective Cell Line
- 1 June 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 24 (12) , 5332-5339
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.24.12.5332-5339.2004
Abstract
Inhibitory synapses are established during development but continue to be generated and modulated in strength in the mature nervous system. In the spinal cord and brainstem, presynaptically released inhibitory neurotransmitter dominantly switches from GABA to glycine during normal development in vivo. While presynaptic mechanisms of the shift of inhibitory neurotransmission are well investigated, the contribution of postsynaptic neurotransmitter receptors to this shift is not fully elucidated. Synaptic clustering of glycine receptors (GlyRs) is regulated by activation-dependent depolarization in early development. However, GlyR activation induces hyperpolarization after the first postnatal week, and little is known whether and how presynaptically released glycine regulates postsynaptic receptors in a depolarization-independent manner in mature developmental stage. Here we developed spinal cord neuronal culture of rodents using chronic strychnine application to investigate whether initial activation of GlyRs in mature stage could change postsynaptic localization of GlyRs. Immunocytochemical analyses demonstrate that chronic blockade of GlyR activation until mature developmental stage resulted in smaller clusters of postsynaptic GlyRs that could be enlarged upon receptor activation for 1 h in the mature stage. Furthermore, live cell-imaging techniques show that GlyR activation decreases its lateral diffusion at synapses, and this phenomenon is dependent on PKC, but neither Ca2+ nor CaMKII activity. These results suggest that the GlyR activation can regulate receptor diffusion and cluster size at inhibitory synapses in mature stage, providing not only new insights into the postsynaptic mechanism of shifting inhibitory neurotransmission but also the inhibitory synaptic plasticity in mature nervous system.Keywords
This publication has 63 references indexed in Scilit:
- ATM and ATRCurrent Biology, 2003
- DNA damage activates ATM through intermolecular autophosphorylation and dimer dissociationNature, 2003
- Hypoxia Links ATR and p53 through Replication ArrestMolecular and Cellular Biology, 2002
- Frequent detection of tumor cells in hematopoietic grafts in neuroblastoma and Ewing’s sarcomaBone Marrow Transplantation, 1998
- TAFII250 Is a Bipartite Protein Kinase That Phosphorylates the Basal Transcription Factor RAP74Cell, 1996
- Assembly of recombinant TFIID reveals differential coactivator requirements for distinct transcriptional activatorsCell, 1994
- Dual role of TFIIH in DNA excision repair and in transcription by RNA polymerase IINature, 1994
- Transcription factor b (TFIIH) is required during nucleotide-excision repair in yeastNature, 1994
- Promoter-Selective Transcriptional Defect in Cell Cycle Mutant ts13 Rescued by hTAF II 250Science, 1994
- Temperature sensitive mutants of BHK cells affected in cell cycle progressionJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1977