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KMID : 0578320080250010007
Molecules and Cells
2008 Volume.25 No. 1 p.7 ~ p.19
Altered Complexin Expression in Psychiatric and Neurological
Nils Brose

Abstract
Complexins play a critical role in the control of fast synchronous neurotransmitter release. They operate by binding to trimeric SNARE complexes consisting of the vesicle protein Synaptobrevin and the plasma membrane proteins Syntaxin and SNAP-25, which are key executors of membrane fusion reactions. SNARE complex binding by Complexins is thought to stabilize and clamp the SNARE complex in a highly fusogenic state, thereby providing a pool of readily releasable synaptic vesicles that can be released quickly and synchronously in response to an action potential and the concomitant increase in intra-synaptic Ca2+ levels. Genetic elimination of Complexins from mammalian neurons causes a strong reduction in evoked neurotransmitter release, and altered Complexin expression levels with consequent deficits in synaptic transmission were suggested to contribute to the etiology or pathogenesis of schizophrenia, Huntington¡¯s disease, depression, bipolar disorder, Parkinson¡¯s disease, Alzheimer¡¯s disease, traumatic brain injury, Wernicke¡¯s encephalopathy, and fetal alcohol syndrome. In the present review I provide a summary of available data on the role of altered Complexin expression in brain diseases. On aggregate, the available information indicates that altered Complexin expression levels are unlikely to have a causal role in the etiology of the disorders that they have been implicated in, but that they may contribute to the corresponding symptoms.
KEYWORD
Bipolar Disorder, Complexin, Depression, Huntington¡¯s Disease, Neurodegenerative Diseases, Schizophrenia, SNARE Complex, Synaptic Transmission, Synaptic Vesicle Fusion
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