Simulated complexes formed from a set of postsynaptic proteins suggest a localised effect of a hypomorphic Shank mutation

The postsynaptic density is an elaborate protein network beneath the postsynaptic membrane involved in the molecular processes underlying learning and memory. The postsynaptic density is built up from the same major proteins but its exact composition and organization differs between synapses. Mutati...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC neuroscience 2024-07, Vol.25 (1), p.32-9, Article 32
Hauptverfasser: Miski, Marcell, Weber, Áron, Fekete-Molnár, Krisztina, Keömley-Horváth, Bence Márk, Csikász-Nagy, Attila, Gáspári, Zoltán
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The postsynaptic density is an elaborate protein network beneath the postsynaptic membrane involved in the molecular processes underlying learning and memory. The postsynaptic density is built up from the same major proteins but its exact composition and organization differs between synapses. Mutations perturbing protein: protein interactions generally occurring in this network might lead to effects specific for cell types or processes, the understanding of which can be especially challenging. In this work we use systems biology-based modeling of protein complex distributions in a simplified set of major postsynaptic proteins to investigate the effect of a hypomorphic Shank mutation perturbing a single well-defined interaction. We use data sets with widely variable abundances of the constituent proteins. Our results suggest that the effect of the mutation is heavily dependent on the overall availability of all the protein components of the whole network and no trivial correspondence between the expression level of the directly affected proteins and overall complex distribution can be observed. Our results stress the importance of context-dependent interpretation of mutations. Even the weakening of a generally occurring protein: protein interaction might have well-defined effects, and these can not easily be predicted based only on the abundance of the proteins directly affected. Our results provide insight on how cell-specific effects can be exerted by a mutation perturbing a generally occurring interaction even when the wider interaction network is largely similar.
ISSN:1471-2202
1471-2202
DOI:10.1186/s12868-024-00880-1