Saltar al contenido principal

Escribe una PREreview

Synaptic and Extrasynaptic NMDA Receptors Oppositely Regulate Dendritic Syntaphilin Intrusion in Multiple Sclerosis

Publicada
Servidor
bioRxiv
DOI
10.64898/2026.07.08.737141

Neurodegeneration is a major determinant of disability progression in multiple sclerosis (MS), yet the pathophysiological mechanisms associating inflammation to neuronal insult remain poorly understood. We recently identified Dendritic Syntaphilin Intrusion (DSI), a novel excitoxicity pathway in which the axonal mitochondrial anchor syntaphilin (SNPH) aberrantly translocates into dendrites, causing neurodegeneration in a non-inflammatory model of MS. However, whether this protein intrudes abruptly into dendrites in inflammatory MS pathology is still not clear. Here, we investigated the role of synaptic and extrasynaptic NMDA receptors (NMDAR) in regulating the intrusion of Syntaphilin into dendrites. Using primary hippocampal neuronal cultures, we examined how the balance between synaptic GluN2A-containing and extrasynaptic GluN2B-containing NMDARs influences DSI under inflammatory conditions. Pharmacological and viral-mediated approaches were employed to manipulate NMDAR subtype activity and evaluate their impact on DSI. Inflammatory cytokines discernibly sensitized neurons to DSI. Our results revealed that blockade of synaptic NMDARs significantly increased DSI, whereas inhibition of extrasynaptic NMDARs reduced DSI. These findings demonstrate opposing roles of NMDAR subtypes, with GluN2A-containing synaptic receptors inhibiting DSI and fostering neuronal survival, while GluN2B-containing extrasynaptic receptors enhancing DSI and neurodegenerative signaling. Manipulation of the GluN2A/GluN2B balance showed opposite effect on DSI, suggesting a relationship between NMDAR subtype signaling and SNPH mislocalization. Overall, our findings extend the relevance of DSI from non-inflammatory MS to inflammatory MS and identify DSI as a downstream convergence point linking inflammatory cytokines and excitotoxic NMDAR signaling to neuronal insult. These results reveal DSI as a potential mechanistic link between inflammatory signaling and excitotoxic neuronal injury and indicate that modulation of GluN2B-dependent pathways warrants further investigation in inflammatory neurodegenerative disorders.

Puedes escribir una PREreview de Synaptic and Extrasynaptic NMDA Receptors Oppositely Regulate Dendritic Syntaphilin Intrusion in Multiple Sclerosis. Una PREreview es una revisión de un preprint y puede variar desde unas pocas oraciones hasta un extenso informe, similar a un informe de revisión por pares organizado por una revista.

Antes de comenzar

Te pediremos que inicies sesión con tu ORCID iD. Si no tienes un iD, puedes crear uno.

¿Qué es un ORCID iD?

Un ORCID iD es un identificador único que te distingue de otros/as con tu mismo nombre o uno similar.

Comenzar ahora