Reactive Oxygen Species Regulate Activity-Dependent Neuronal Structural Plasticity

bioRxiv(2017)

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摘要
Neurons adjust their excitability, connectivity and structure in response to changes in activity, yet how neurons sense their activity level remains unclear. We have found that motorneurons cell-autonomously monitor their activity by responding to the levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS), a metabolic mitochondrial byproduct. The highly conserved Parkinsons disease-linked protein DJ1b is central to this, acting as a redox sensor to regulate pre- and postsynaptic structural plasticity via activation of the PI3Kinase pathway.
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