Extracellular matrix proteolysis maintains synapse plasticity during brain development

Kavli Affiliate: Anna Molofsky and Christoph Kirst

| Authors: Haruna Nakajo, Ran Cao, Supriya A. Mula, Justin McKetney, Nicholas J. Silva, Muskaan Shah, Indigo V.L. Rose, Martin Kampmann, Danielle L. Swaney, Christoph Kirst and Anna V. Molofsky

| Summary:

Maintaining a dynamic neuronal synapse pool is critical to brain development. The extracellular matrix (ECM) regulates synaptic plasticity via mechanisms that are still being defined and are studied predominantly in adulthood. Using live imaging of excitatory synapses in zebrafish hindbrain we observed a bimodal distribution of short-lived (dynamic) and longer-lived (stable) synapses. Disruption of ECM via digestion or brevican deletion destabilized dynamic but not stable synapses and led to decreased synapse density. Conversely, loss of matrix metalloproteinase 14 (MMP14) led to accumulation of brevican and increased the stable synapse pool, resulting in increased synapse density. Microglial MMP14 was essential to these effects in both fish and human iPSC-derived cultures. Both MMP14 and brevican were required for experience-dependent synapse plasticity in a motor learning assay. These data, complemented by mathematical modeling, define an essential role of ECM remodeling in maintaining a dynamic subset of synapses during brain development.

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