Deorphanizing FAM19A proteins as pan-neurexin ligands with an unusual biosynthetic binding mechanism

Author:

Khalaj Anna J.1ORCID,Sterky Fredrik H.1ORCID,Sclip Alessandra1ORCID,Schwenk Jochen2ORCID,Brunger Axel T.1ORCID,Fakler Bernd234ORCID,Südhof Thomas C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Molecular and Cellular Physiology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA

2. Institute of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany

3. Centres for Biological Signalling Studies (BIOSS) and Integrative Biological Signalling Studies (CIBSS), Freiburg, Germany

4. Center for Basics in NeuroModulation, Freiburg, Germany

Abstract

Neurexins are presynaptic adhesion molecules that organize synapses by binding to diverse trans-synaptic ligands, but how neurexins are regulated is incompletely understood. Here we identify FAM19A/TAFA proteins, “orphan" cytokines, as neurexin regulators that interact with all neurexins, except for neurexin-1γ, via an unusual mechanism. Specifically, we show that FAM19A1-A4 bind to the cysteine-loop domain of neurexins by forming intermolecular disulfide bonds during transport through the secretory pathway. FAM19A-binding required both the cysteines of the cysteine-loop domain and an adjacent sequence of neurexins. Genetic deletion of neurexins suppressed FAM19A1 expression, demonstrating that FAM19As physiologically interact with neurexins. In hippocampal cultures, expression of exogenous FAM19A1 decreased neurexin O-glycosylation and suppressed its heparan sulfate modification, suggesting that FAM19As regulate the post-translational modification of neurexins. Given the selective expression of FAM19As in specific subtypes of neurons and their activity-dependent regulation, these results suggest that FAM19As serve as cell type–specific regulators of neurexin modifications.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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