Cytoplasmic and nuclear protein interaction networks of the synapto-nuclear messenger CRTC1 in neurons reveal cooperative chromatin binding between CREB1 and CRTC1, MEF2C and RFX3

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Glutamatergic stimulation of excitatory neurons triggers the synapto-nuclear translocation of the cAMP response element (CRE) binding protein (CREB) regulated transcription coactivator 1 (CRTC1), resulting in the transcription of CREB1 target genes. Whether and how CRTC1 and CREB1 interact with other transcription factors to regulate activity-dependent transcription, and what the role of CRTC1 is in neurons beyond the activation of CREB1 regulated transcription, remains unknown. To address these questions in an unbiased manner, we used proximity labeling to identify CRTC1-proximal proteins in cytoplasmic and nuclear compartments of rodent forebrain neurons. The cytoplasmic CRTC1 proxisome included a variety of signaling pathways and downstream cellular processes involved in synaptic plasticity. In contrast, the nuclear CRTC1 proxisome included transcription factors that mediate activity-dependent transcription, chromatin factors, and splicing factors. Our data revealed that CRTC1 and CREB1 interact with MEF2C and RFX3 transcription factors in an activity-dependent manner. Thus, in chromatin immunoprecipitation-sequencing experiments, CREB1 was prebound to chromatin regions containing bZIP motifs in a manner that was unchanged by neuronal activity, while glutamatergic stimulation triggered the recruitment of CRTC1 and CREB1 to activity-dependent enhancers enriched in motifs for MEF2C and RFX3. Collectively, these results not only enhance our understanding of the role of cytoplasmic and nuclear CRTC1 in neurons, but also reveal a role for CRTC1 in promoting cooperativity of CREB1 with other transcription factors in response to synaptic activity.

Article activity feed