Publication | Closed Access
Monosomes actively translate synaptic mRNAs in neuronal processes
273
Citations
84
References
2020
Year
Local Protein SynthesisSynaptic PlasticityMost MrnasNeuroanatomyActive Protein SynthesisNeurotransmissionNeuroscienceMolecular NeurobiologySystems BiologyMedicineCell BiologyProtein SynthesisSynaptic Mrnas
To accommodate their complex morphology, neurons localize messenger RNAs (mRNAs) and ribosomes near synapses to produce proteins locally. However, a relative paucity of polysomes (considered the active sites of translation) detected in electron micrographs of neuronal processes has suggested a limited capacity for local protein synthesis. In this study, we used polysome profiling together with ribosome footprinting of microdissected rodent synaptic regions to reveal a surprisingly high number of dendritic and/or axonal transcripts preferentially associated with monosomes (single ribosomes). Furthermore, the neuronal monosomes were in the process of active protein synthesis. Most mRNAs showed a similar translational status in the cell bodies and neurites, but some transcripts exhibited differential ribosome occupancy in the compartments. Monosome-preferring transcripts often encoded high-abundance synaptic proteins. Thus, monosome translation contributes to the local neuronal proteome.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1