Intracellular protein-lipid interactions drive presynaptic assembly prior to neurexin recruitment

Neuron. 2025 Jan 9:S0896-6273(24)00916-4. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2024.12.017. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Neurexin cell-adhesion molecules regulate synapse development and function by recruiting synaptic components. Here, we uncover a mechanism for presynaptic assembly that precedes neurexin recruitment, mediated by interactions between cytosolic proteins and membrane phospholipids. Developmental imaging in C. elegans reveals that the intracellular active zone protein SYD-1 accumulates at nascent presynapses prior to its binding partner neurexin. Combining molecular dynamics simulations to model intrinsic interactions between SYD-1 and lipid bilayers with biochemical and in vivo validation of these predictions, we find that PIP2-interacting residues in the SYD-1 C2 domain are required for active zone assembly. Genetic perturbation of a PIP2-generating enzyme disrupts synaptic SYD-1 accumulation, while the PIP2-interacting domain of mammalian RIM1 can compensate for the SYD-1 C2 domain, suggesting functional homology between these proteins. Finally, we propose that the evolutionarily conserved γ-neurexin isoform represents a minimal neurexin sequence that stabilizes nascent presynaptic assemblies, potentially a core function of this isoform.

Keywords: C. elegans; PIP2; SYD-1; active zone scaffold; cell-adhesion molecule; neurexin; phospholipid; synapse; synaptogenesis.