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Abstract
Localization of the N-methyl-D-aspartate type glutamate receptor (NMDAR) to dendritic spines is essential for excitatory synaptic transmission and plasticity. Rather than remaining trapped at synaptic sites, NMDA receptors undergo constant cycling into and out of the postsynaptic density. Receptor movement is constrained by protein-protein interactions with both the intracellular and extracellular domains of the NMDAR. The role of extracellular interactions on the mobility of the NMDAR is poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that the positive surface charge of the hinge region of the N-terminal domain in the GluN1 subunit of the NMDAR is required to maintain NMDARs at dendritic spine synapses and mediates the direct extracellular interaction with a negatively charged phospho-tyrosine on the receptor tyrosine kinase EphB2. Loss of the EphB-NMDAR interaction by either mutating GluN1 or knocking down endogenous EphB2 increases NMDAR mobility. These findings begin to define a mechanism for extracellular interactions mediated by charged domains.
NMDA receptors undergo constant cycling into and out of the postsynaptic density. Here authors show that NMDAR's GluN1 subunit is required to maintain NMDARs at dendritic spine synapses by direct extracellular interaction with the receptor tyrosine kinase EphB2.
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1 Thomas Jefferson University, Department of Neuroscience and Jefferson Center for Synaptic Biology, Philadelphia, USA (GRID:grid.265008.9) (ISNI:0000 0001 2166 5843)
2 Thomas Jefferson University, Department of Neuroscience and Jefferson Center for Synaptic Biology, Philadelphia, USA (GRID:grid.265008.9) (ISNI:0000 0001 2166 5843); University of Chicago, Department of Neurobiology, Chicago, USA (GRID:grid.170205.1) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 7822)