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Modular composition and dynamics of native GABAB receptors identified by high-resolution proteomics.

Jochen SchwenkEnrique Pérez-GarciAndy SchneiderAstrid KolleweAnne Gauthier-KemperThorsten FritziusAdi RavehMargarita C DinamarcaAlexander HanuschkinWolfgang BildlJürgen KlingaufMartin GassmannUwe SchulteBernhard BettlerBernd Fakler
Published in: Nature neuroscience (2015)
GABAB receptors, the most abundant inhibitory G protein-coupled receptors in the mammalian brain, display pronounced diversity in functional properties, cellular signaling and subcellular distribution. We used high-resolution functional proteomics to identify the building blocks of these receptors in the rodent brain. Our analyses revealed that native GABAB receptors are macromolecular complexes with defined architecture, but marked diversity in subunit composition: the receptor core is assembled from GABAB1a/b, GABAB2, four KCTD proteins and a distinct set of G-protein subunits, whereas the receptor's periphery is mostly formed by transmembrane proteins of different classes. In particular, the periphery-forming constituents include signaling effectors, such as Cav2 and HCN channels, and the proteins AJAP1 and amyloid-β A4, both of which tightly associate with the sushi domains of GABAB1a. Our results unravel the molecular diversity of GABAB receptors and their postnatal assembly dynamics and provide a roadmap for studying the cellular signaling of this inhibitory neurotransmitter receptor.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • mass spectrometry
  • preterm infants
  • resting state
  • brain injury
  • functional connectivity
  • single cell
  • label free
  • liquid chromatography