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Neuroligin-4 is localized to glycinergic postsynapses and regulates inhibition in the retina
ISSN
0027-8424
Date Issued
2011
Author(s)
Hoon, Mrinalini
Falkenburger, Björn
Hammer, Matthieu
Patrizi, Annarita
Schmidt, Karl-Friedrich
Sassoè-Pognetto, Marco
Taschenberger, Holger
Varoqueaux, Frédérique
DOI
10.1073/pnas.1006946108
Abstract
Neuroligins (NL1-NL4) are postsynaptic adhesion proteins that control the maturation and function of synapses in the central nervous system (CNS). Loss-of-function mutations in NL4 are linked to rare forms of monogenic heritable autism, but its localization and function are unknown. Using the retina as a model system, we show that NL4 is preferentially localized to glycinergic postsynapses and that the loss of NL4 is accompanied by a reduced number of glycine receptors mediating fast glycinergic transmission. Accordingly, NL4-deficient ganglion cells exhibit slower glycinergic miniature postsynaptic currents and subtle alterations in their stimuluscoding efficacy, and inhibition within the NL4-deficient retinal network is altered as assessed by electroretinogram recordings. These data indicate that NL4 shapes network activity and information processing in the retina by modulating glycinergic inhibition. Importantly, NL4 is also targeted to inhibitory synapses in other areas of the CNS, such as the thalamus, colliculi, brainstem, and spinal cord, and forms complexes with the inhibitory postsynapse proteins gephyrin and collybistin in vivo, indicating that NL4 is an important component of glycinergic postsynapses.