Home » Health News »
Protein interactions and brain function
Forty years since its discovery, much remains to be discovered about an enzyme called CaMKII that plays a key role in shaping learning and memory in the brain.
Now Roger Colbran, Ph.D., graduate student Tyler Perfitt and colleagues report in the Journal of Neuroscience the discovery of a novel interaction between CaMKII and a protein called Shank3.
Shank3 organizes other proteins at synapses that are important for learning and memory. Mutations in the Shank3 gene have been linked to autism and schizophrenia. Recent studies also have identified CaMKII mutations in individuals with autism and intellectual disability.
Perfitt found that CaMKII activation stimulates its binding to Shank3 and other associated proteins. The CaMKII-Shank3 interaction, in turn, is essential for the initiation of long-range calcium channel signaling to regulate gene expression important in synaptic plasticity, brain development and behavior.
Source: Read Full Article