Selective endocytosis of Ca 2+ -permeable AMPARs by the Alzheimer's disease risk factor CALM bidirectionally controls synaptic plasticity.
Domenico Azarnia TehranGaga KochlamazashviliNiccolò P PampaloniSilvia SposiniJasmeet Kaur ShergillMartin LehmannNatalya PashkovaClaudia SchmidtDelia LöweHanna NapieczynskaArnd HeuserAndrew J R PlestedDavid PerraisRobert C PiperVolker HauckeTanja MaritzenPublished in: Science advances (2022)
AMPA-type glutamate receptors (AMPARs) mediate fast excitatory neurotransmission, and the plastic modulation of their surface levels determines synaptic strength. AMPARs of different subunit compositions fulfill distinct roles in synaptic long-term potentiation (LTP) and depression (LTD) to enable learning. Largely unknown endocytic mechanisms mediate the subunit-selective regulation of the surface levels of GluA1-homomeric Ca 2+ -permeable (CP) versus heteromeric Ca 2+ -impermeable (CI) AMPARs. Here, we report that the Alzheimer's disease risk factor CALM controls the surface levels of CP-AMPARs and thereby reciprocally regulates LTP and LTD in vivo to modulate learning. We show that CALM selectively facilitates the endocytosis of ubiquitinated CP-AMPARs via a mechanism that depends on ubiquitin recognition by its ANTH domain but is independent of clathrin. Our data identify CALM and related ANTH domain-containing proteins as the core endocytic machinery that determines the surface levels of CP-AMPARs to bidirectionally control synaptic plasticity and modulate learning in the mammalian brain.