Author:
Mucha Mariusz,Labrador-Ramos Alberto,Attwood Benjamin K.,Bajor Malgorzata,Kolenchery Jaison B.,Skrzypiec Anna E.,Brambilla Valentina,Magnowska Marta,Figiel Izabela,Swiatek Michal,Wiktorowska Lucja,Shah Rahul S.,Pijet Barbara,Sakai Yusuke,Nagai Nobuo,Klejman Agata,Wlodarczyk Jakub,Kaczmarek Leszek,Przewlocki Ryszard,Pawlak Robert
Abstract
AbstractSevere stress can trigger complex behavioural changes such as high anxiety (1). Inhibitory GABA-ergic interneurons in the lateral division of the central amygdala (CEl) control anxiety through feedforward inhibition of their target cells in the medial division (CEm) (2, 3). In particular, PKCδ-positive (PKCδ+) interneurons in CEl are critical elements of the neuronal circuitry of fear and anxiety (3–5), but the molecular mechanisms they employ are poorly understood. Here, we show that, during stress, GABA-ergic synapses of amygdala PKCδ+ interneurons are regulated by a serine protease plasmin. On stress, plasmin cleaves the extracellular portion of the tyrosine kinase receptor EphA4 triggering its dissociation from gephyrin, a postsynaptic GABA-receptor anchoring protein. Dynamic EphA4/gephyrin interaction leads to modification of dendritic spine morphology and synaptic GABA-receptor expression profile. Consistent with the critical role for the plasmin/EphA4/gephyrin signalling axis in anxiogenesis, viral delivery of plasmin-resistant (prEphA4) form of EphA4 into the central amygdala prevents the development of stress-induced anxiety in mice, while the delivery of plasmin-truncated EphA4 (tEphA4) dramatically enhances this effect. Thus, our studies identify a novel, critical molecular cascade regulating GABA-ergic signalling in the central amygdala synapses that allows bidirectional switching of animal behaviour from high to low anxiety states.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory