logo
Loading...
Activity-dependent synapse elimination requires caspase-3 activation
Medicine and HealtheLife

Activity-dependent synapse elimination requires caspase-3 activation

Z. Yu, A. Gutu, et al.

During development, weak synapses are selectively removed in an activity-dependent manner — this study shows that inhibiting synaptic transmission triggers postsynaptic caspase-3 activation. Caspase-3 deficiency impairs both spontaneous and experience-dependent synapse elimination, reduces microglial engulfment of inactive synapses, and protects against amyloid-β–induced synapse loss in an Alzheimer's model. Research conducted by Zhou Yu, Andrian Gutu, Namsoo Kim, and Erin K O'Shea.... show more
Abstract
During brain development, synapses are initially formed in excess and are later eliminated in an activity-dependent manner. Weak synapses are preferentially removed, but the mechanism linking neuronal activity to synapse removal is unclear. Here, we show that, in the developing mouse visual pathway, inhibiting synaptic transmission induces postsynaptic activation of caspase-3. Caspase-3 deficiency results in defects in synapse elimination driven by both spontaneous and experience-dependent neural activity. Notably, caspase-3 deficiency blocks activity-dependent synapse elimination, as evidenced by reduced engulfment of inactive synapses by microglia. Furthermore, in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease, caspase-3 deficiency protects against synapse loss induced by amyloid-β deposition. Our results reveal caspase-3 activation as a key step in activity-dependent synapse elimination during development and synapse loss in neurodegeneration.
Publisher
eLife
Published On
Jun 10, 2025
Authors
Zhou Yu, Andrian Gutu, Namsoo Kim, Erin K O'Shea
Tags
caspase-3synapse eliminationactivity-dependent pruningmicroglial engulfmentvisual pathway developmentamyloid-βAlzheimer's disease
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 22+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny