RIM and RIM-Binding Protein Localize Synaptic CaV2 Channels to Differentially Regulate Transmission in Neuronal Circuits

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This study explores the role of Rab3-interacting molecule (RIM) and RIM-binding proteins in localizing voltage-gated Ca2+ channels (VGCCs) at synapses to regulate synaptic transmission in neuronal circuits. The research conducted in Caenorhabditis elegans hermaphrodites shows that mutations affecting RIM proteins result in altered neurotransmitter release, with different effects on cholinergic and GABAergic transmission. The findings suggest that RIM proteins differentially regulate the balance between excitation and inhibition in motor neurons, highlighting the complexity of synaptic transmission regulation. The study also reveals that untethering the CaV2 channel from its binding proteins affects transmission, emphasizing the importance of VGCC regulation for synaptic function. Overall, the research demonstrates the robustness and flexibility of synaptic transmission mechanisms.

At chemical synapses, voltage-gated Ca2+ channels (VGCCs) translate electrical signals into a trigger for synaptic vesicle (SV) fusion. VGCCs and the Ca2+ microdomains they elicit must be located precisely to primed SVs to evoke rapid transmitter release. Localization is mediated by Rab3-interacting molecule (RIM) and RIM-binding proteins, which interact and bind to the C terminus of the CaV2 VGCC α-subunit. We studied this machinery at the mixed cholinergic/GABAergic neuromuscular junction of Caenorhabditis elegans hermaphrodites. rimb-1 mutants had mild synaptic defects, through loosening the anchoring of UNC-2/CaV2 and delaying the onset of SV fusion. UNC-10/RIM deletion much more severely affected transmission. Although postsynaptic depolarization was reduced, rimb-1 mutants had increased cholinergic (but reduced GABAergic) transmission, to compensate for the delayed release. This did not occur when the excitation–inhibition (E–I) balance was altered by removing GABA transmission. Further analyses of GABA defective mutants and GABAA or GABAB receptor deletions, as well as cholinergic rescue of RIMB-1, emphasized that GABA neurons may be more affected than cholinergic neurons. Thus, RIMB-1 function differentially affects excitation–inhibition balance in the different motor neurons, and RIMB-1 thus may differentially regulate transmission within circuits. Untethering the UNC-2/CaV2 channel by removing its C-terminal PDZ ligand exacerbated the rimb-1 defects, and similar phenotypes resulted from acute degradation of the CaV2 β-subunit CCB-1. Therefore, untethering of the CaV2 complex is as severe as its elimination, yet it does not abolish transmission, likely due to compensation by CaV1. Thus, robustness and flexibility of synaptic transmission emerge from VGCC regulation.

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