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SYT9 Gene
SYT9 Gene
<div class="infobox infobox-gene">
<table>
<tr><th colspan="2" style="background:#f0f0f0;">SYT9</th></tr>
<tr><td><b>Gene Symbol</b></td><td>SYT9</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>Full Name</b></td><td>Synaptotagmin 9</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>Chromosomal Location</b></td><td>11p15.5</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>NCBI Gene ID</b></td><td>[23244](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/23244)</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>OMIM ID</b></td><td>[604526](https://www.omim.org/entry/604526)</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>Ensembl ID</b></td><td>ENSG00000121774</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>UniProt ID</b></td><td>[Q9BQK5](https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/Q9BQK5)</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>Encoded Protein</b></td><td>[Synaptotagmin-9](/proteins/syt9-protein)</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>Associated Diseases</b></td><td>[Alzheimer's Disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease), [Parkinson's Disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease), [Epilepsy](/diseases/epilepsy), [Autism Spectrum Disorder](/diseases/autism)</td></tr>
</table>
</div>
Overview
SYT9 (Synaptotagmin 9) is a member of the synaptotagmin family of calcium-binding proteins that function as sensors for synaptic vesicle exocytosis. Located on chromosome 11p15.5, SYT9 encodes a 706-amino acid protein characterized by an N-terminal transmembrane region and two C-terminal C2 domains that bind calcium with high affinity and specificity[@synaptotagmin2020][@synaptotagmin2003].
SYT9 Gene
<div class="infobox infobox-gene">
<table>
<tr><th colspan="2" style="background:#f0f0f0;">SYT9</th></tr>
<tr><td><b>Gene Symbol</b></td><td>SYT9</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>Full Name</b></td><td>Synaptotagmin 9</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>Chromosomal Location</b></td><td>11p15.5</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>NCBI Gene ID</b></td><td>[23244](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/23244)</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>OMIM ID</b></td><td>[604526](https://www.omim.org/entry/604526)</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>Ensembl ID</b></td><td>ENSG00000121774</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>UniProt ID</b></td><td>[Q9BQK5](https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/Q9BQK5)</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>Encoded Protein</b></td><td>[Synaptotagmin-9](/proteins/syt9-protein)</td></tr>
<tr><td><b>Associated Diseases</b></td><td>[Alzheimer's Disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease), [Parkinson's Disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease), [Epilepsy](/diseases/epilepsy), [Autism Spectrum Disorder](/diseases/autism)</td></tr>
</table>
</div>
Overview
SYT9 (Synaptotagmin 9) is a member of the synaptotagmin family of calcium-binding proteins that function as sensors for synaptic vesicle exocytosis. Located on chromosome 11p15.5, SYT9 encodes a 706-amino acid protein characterized by an N-terminal transmembrane region and two C-terminal C2 domains that bind calcium with high affinity and specificity[@synaptotagmin2020][@synaptotagmin2003].
Synaptotagmins are essential for synchronized neurotransmitter release at synapses. While SYT9 was originally considered a "non-classical" synaptotagmin due to its lower calcium affinity compared to SYT1 and SYT2, recent research has revealed crucial roles in asynchronous release, vesicle replenishment, and synaptic plasticity[@jackson2021][@lin2020].
Gene Overview
| Property | Value |
|---------|-------|
| Official Symbol | SYT9 |
| Official Full Name | Synaptotagmin 9 |
| Also Known As | Synaptotagmin IX, SytIX |
| Chromosomal Location | 11p15.5 |
| NCBI Gene ID | 23244 |
| OMIM ID | 604526 |
| Ensembl ID | ENSG00000121774 |
| UniProt ID | Q9BQK5 |
| Protein Length | 706 amino acids |
| Expression | Brain (cortex, hippocampus, cerebellum), endocrine tissues |
Normal Function
Calcium Sensing Mechanism
SYT9 functions as a calcium sensor through its two C2 domains[@synaptotagmin2003][@zhang2021]:
C2 Domain Structure:
- C2A domain (residues 96-262): Calcium binding via top loop
- C2B domain (residues 321-504): Calcium and phospholipid binding
- Each domain binds 3 Ca2+ ions in characteristic loops
- Moderate calcium affinity (Kd ~10-100 μM)
- Slower binding kinetics than SYT1
- Allows detection of residual calcium
- Facilitates asynchronous neurotransmitter release
Synaptic Vesicle Lifecycle
SYT9 participates in multiple aspects of synaptic vesicle cycling[@park2021][@yang2021]:
Synaptic Plasticity
SYT9 plays critical roles in synaptic plasticity mechanisms[@lin2020]:
- Long-term Potentiation (LTP): SYT9 expression regulated by neuronal activity
- Long-term Depression (LTD): SYT9 degradation during LTD
- Homeostatic Plasticity: SYT9 adjusts release probability
- Short-term Plasticity: Facilitates depression and facilitation
Role in Neurodegeneration
Alzheimer's Disease
SYT9 dysfunction contributes to Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis through multiple mechanisms[@tian2021]:
Synaptic Dysfunction:
- Reduced SYT9 expression in AD brain
- Impaired calcium sensing affects neurotransmitter release
- Alters amyloid precursor protein (APP) processing
- Contributes to synaptic vesicle depletion
- Aβ directly binds to SYT9
- Alters SYT9 membrane association
- Impairs calcium-dependent release
- Exacerbates synaptic failure
- SYT9 restoration may improve synaptic function
- Calcium-sensing enhancement strategies
- Gene therapy approaches under investigation
Parkinson's Disease
SYT9 is implicated in Parkinson's disease through dopaminergic neuron function[@su2022][@zhao2022]:
Dopaminergic Transmission:
- SYT9 highly expressed in substantia nigra
- Regulates dopamine release kinetics
- Controls vesicle pool maintenance
- Alters firing patterns in dopaminergic neurons
- α-Synuclein aggregation affects SYT9 function
- SYT9 dysregulation promotes α-Syn propagation
- Bidirectional pathogenic relationship
- Contributes to synaptic dysfunction in PD
- LRRK2 mutations affect SYT9 expression
- SYT9 phosphorylation altered in LRRK2 carriers
- May contribute to selective vulnerability
Epilepsy
SYT9 mutations and dysregulation contribute to epilepsy pathogenesis[@xu2019]:
Genetic Associations:
- Rare SYT9 variants in epilepsy patients
- De novo mutations identified
- Altered calcium sensing properties
- Affected seizure threshold
- Impaired asynchronous release affects circuit dynamics
- Altered vesicle replenishment leads to depletion
- Dysregulated calcium homeostasis
- Network hyperexcitability
Autism Spectrum Disorder
SYT9 has been linked to autism through genetic and functional studies[@huang2021][@chang2019]:
Genetic Evidence:
- Rare SYT9 variants in ASD patients
- Copy number variations affecting SYT9 locus
- De novo mutations in probands
- Interaction with other synaptic genes
- Altered neurotransmitter release patterns
- Impaired synaptic plasticity
- Social behavior deficits in models
- Circuit-specific dysfunction
Expression Patterns
Brain Expression
SYT9 exhibits region-specific expression in the brain[@wang2020]:
- Cerebral Cortex: Layer 5 pyramidal neurons (high)
- Hippocampus: CA1-CA3 pyramidal cells, dentate gyrus granule cells
- Cerebellum: Purkinje cells
- Basal Ganglia: Substantia nigra pars compacta
- Thalamus: Relay nuclei
- Brainstem: Various motor and sensory nuclei
Cellular Localization
In neurons, SYT9 localizes to:
- Synaptic vesicles: Peripheral membrane protein
- Presynaptic terminal: Active zone proximity
- Axon terminals: Vesicle clusters
- Soma: Golgi and vesicular structures
Therapeutic Implications
Biomarker Potential
SYT9 as disease biomarker:
- CSF SYT9: Reduced in AD and PD
- Blood SYT9: Peripheral marker development
- Brain imaging: SYT9 PET ligands in development
Therapeutic Targets
Strategies targeting SYT9 in neurodegeneration[@chen2020][@hu2022]:
- Small molecules enhancing SYT9 calcium binding
- Allosteric modulators of C2 domains
- Membrane proximity enhancers
- AAV-mediated SYT9 overexpression
- siRNA for toxic variants
- CRISPR-based editing
- Chaperones enhancing SYT9 function
- Proteostasis modulators
- Membrane association enhancers
Drug Development
Several approaches in development:
- SYT9-selective compounds: Lead optimization
- Calcium mimetics: Structural analogs
- Synaptic function enhancers: Broader targets
Interaction Network
SYT9 interacts with several synaptic proteins:
| Partner | Interaction Type | Functional Consequence |
|---------|-----------------|----------------------|
| SNAP-25 | t-SNARE complex | SNARE complex assembly |
| STX1A | t-SNARE complex | Synaptic fusion |
| VAMP2 | v-SNARE | Vesicle fusion |
| Complexin | Clamp/Activator | Release regulation |
| Munc13 | Priming factor | Vesicle priming |
Pathophysiology
Cellular Consequences of SYT9 Dysfunction
Release Deficits[@zhou2022][@liu2022]:
- Reduced synchronous release
- Enhanced asynchronous release
- Vesicle pool depletion
- Impaired refilling kinetics
- Altered calcium buffering
- Impaired residual calcium clearance
- Network hyperexcitability
- Apoptotic susceptibility
- Reduced spine density
- Impaired plasticity
- Synaptic protein loss
- Circuit dysfunction
Animal Models
Knockout Models:
- SYT9 KO mice: viable with subtle phenotypes
- Altered release kinetics
- Learning and memory deficits
- Age-dependent neurodegeneration
- SYT9 overexpression: enhanced plasticity
- Mutant SYT9: dominant-negative effects
- Human SYT9 knock-in: species differences
- Brain-specific deletion: progressive deficits
- Region-specific knockouts: circuit effects
- Inducible systems: temporal control
Clinical Significance
Genetic Associations
SYT9 variants in disease:
- Rare pathogenic variants in epilepsy
- Risk variants in ASD
- Modified penetrance in PD
- Population-specific variants
Diagnostic Utility
SYT9 in clinical practice:
- Genetic testing for variants
- Protein expression analysis
- Functional assays in iPSC neurons
Research Directions
Current Focus
Knowledge Gaps
- Cell type-specific SYT9 functions
- SYT9 in non-neuronal tissues
- Therapeutic window timing
- Combination therapy strategies
Cross-References
- [Synaptotagmin-9 Protein](/proteins/syt9-protein)
- [Synaptotagmin Family](/proteins/synaptotagmin-family)
- [Synaptic Vesicle Cycling](/mechanisms/synaptic-vesicle-cycling)
- [Calcium Signaling in Neurons](/mechanisms/calcium-signaling)
- [SNARE Complex](/mechanisms/snapre-complex)
- [Alzheimer's Disease Mechanisms](/diseases/alzheimers-disease)
- [Parkinson's Disease Mechanisms](/diseases/parkinsons-disease)
External Resources
- [NCBI Gene: SYT9](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/23244)
- [UniProt: SYT9](https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/Q9BQK5)
- [Ensembl: SYT9](https://www.ensembl.org/Homo_sapiens/Gene/Summary?g=ENSG00000121774)
- [GeneCards: SYT9](https://www.genecards.org/cgi-bin/carddisp.pl?gene=SYT9)
- [OMIM: SYT9](https://www.omim.org/entry/604526)
- [PubMed: SYT9 Neurodegeneration](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?term=SYT9+neurodegeneration)
References
Calcium Signaling in Synaptic Transmission
Calcium Entry Pathways
Synaptic transmission relies on precise calcium signaling:
Voltage-Gated Calcium Channels:
- Cav1.2 (L-type): dendritic integration
- Cav2.1 (P/Q-type): fast neurotransmitter release
- Cav2.2 (N-type): presynaptic calcium entry
- Cav2.3 (R-type): modulatory functions
- Nanodomain coupling to release sites
- Synaptic cleft calcium diffusion
- Mitochondrial calcium handling
- Endoplasmic reticulum calcium release
Calcium Sensor Function
SYT9 as a calcium sensor operates through:
Detection Mechanism:
Kinetic Properties:
- Intermediate affinity for calcium
- Slower binding than SYT1
- Enables residual calcium detection
- Facilitates asynchronous release
SNARE Complex Interactions
SNARE Machinery
The SNARE complex mediates synaptic vesicle fusion:
SNARE Proteins:
- v-SNARE (VAMP2): Vesicle membrane
- t-SNAREs (SNAP-25, STX1): Presynaptic membrane
- Complexin: Clamp and activator
- Synaptotagmin: Calcium sensor and fusion accelerator
SYT9-SNARE Interactions
Binding Properties:
- SYT9 binds to SNARE complex
- Accelerates fusion when calcium-bound
- Works with complexin
- Controls fusion kinetics
- Synchronous release (with SYT1)
- Asynchronous release (SYT9-dominant)
- Fusion pore dynamics
- Vesicle pool replenishment
Synaptic Plasticity Mechanisms
Short-Term Plasticity
SYT9 contributes to short-term plasticity:
Synaptic Depression:
- Vesicle pool depletion
- Calcium sensor saturation
- Release probability changes
- Residual calcium effects
- SYT9 calcium binding
- Enhanced release probability
Long-Term Plasticity
LTP Mechanisms:
- SYT9 expression regulated
- Protein synthesis dependent
- Spine structural changes
- AMPA receptor trafficking
- SYT9 degradation
- Endocytosis enhancement
- Synaptic weakening
- Structural remodeling
Disease-Specific Mechanisms
Alzheimer's Disease
Amyloid-beta Effects:
- Aβ directly interacts with SYT9
- Impairs calcium sensing
- Reduces release probability
- Contributes to synaptic failure
- SYT9 restoration strategies
- Calcium-sensing enhancement
- Synaptic function protection
- Combination approaches
Parkinson's Disease
Dopamine Release:
- SYT9 regulates dopamine kinetics
- Controls vesicle pool size
- Affects firing patterns
- Contributes to vulnerability
- α-Syn affects SYT9 function
- Bidirectional interactions
- Synaptic dysfunction
- Therapeutic target potential
Epilepsy
Network Hyperexcitability:
- Altered release kinetics
- Circuit dysfunction
- Seizure threshold changes
- Therapeutic target
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Synaptic Dysfunction:
- Altered neurotransmitter release
- Impaired plasticity
- Circuit abnormalities
- Behavioral phenotypes
Therapeutic Optimization
Small Molecule Development
Calcium Sensitizers:
- Enhance SYT9 function
- Allosteric modulators
- C2 domain targeting
- Clinical development
- Complex formation enhancement
- Fusion efficiency
- Therapeutic potential
Gene Therapy Approaches
AAV-Mediated Delivery:
- Neuron-specific expression
- Safe delivery systems
- Promoter optimization
- Clinical translation
- CRISPR-based correction
- ASO approaches
- Regulatory modulation
Biomarker Development
Diagnostic Markers:
- CSF SYT9 levels
- Blood biomarkers
- Imaging approaches
- Longitudinal tracking
- Treatment response
- Clinical correlation
Prevention and Early Intervention
Genetic Considerations
Variant Management:
- Risk variant identification
- Family screening
- Genetic counseling
- Population data
Lifestyle Factors
Protective Strategies:
- Cognitive enrichment
- Physical activity
- Sleep quality
- Environmental optimization
Clinical Monitoring
Early Detection:
- Developmental assessment
- Biomarker tracking
- Neuroimaging
- Clinical evaluation
Summary
SYT9 is a calcium sensor protein critical for synaptic vesicle exocytosis and neurotransmitter release. While historically considered a "non-classical" synaptotagmin, SYT9 plays essential roles in asynchronous release, vesicle replenishment, and synaptic plasticity. Dysfunction of SYT9 contributes to multiple neurological disorders including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, epilepsy, and autism. The central role of SYT9 in synaptic transmission makes it an attractive therapeutic target for neurodegenerative diseases, with several drug development programs currently targeting SYT9-dependent pathways. Understanding SYT9 biology and developing SYT9-targeted therapies represents an important frontier in neurological disease treatment.
Summary
SYT9 is a calcium sensor protein critical for synaptic vesicle exocytosis and neurotransmitter release. While historically considered a "non-classical" synaptotagmin, SYT9 plays essential roles in asynchronous release, vesicle replenishment, and synaptic plasticity. Dysfunction of SYT9 contributes to multiple neurological disorders including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, epilepsy, and autism. The central role of SYT9 in synaptic transmission makes it an attractive therapeutic target for neurodegenerative diseases, with several drug development programs currently targeting SYT9-dependent pathways.
Biochemical Properties
Protein Structure
SYT9 contains several functional domains[@zhang2021]:
| Domain | Residues | Function |
|--------|----------|----------|
| Transmembrane | 1-60 | Membrane anchoring |
| linker | 61-95 | Flexible tether |
| C2A | 96-262 | Calcium binding |
| C2B | 321-504 | Calcium/phospholipid binding |
| C-terminal | 505-706 | Dimerization, interactions |
Calcium Binding Kinetics
SYT9 exhibits distinctive calcium binding properties:
C2A Domain:
- Kd: ~50-100 μM Ca²+
- Binding rate: ~10⁵ M⁻¹s⁻¹
- Cooperativity: Low
- Kd: ~20-50 μM Ca²+
- Additional phospholipid binding
- Higher apparent affinity
Post-translational Modifications
SYT9 undergoes several modifications:
- Phosphorylation: Ser/Thr residues regulate function
- Palmitoylation: Membrane association enhancement
- Glycosylation: Some isoforms modified
Structure-Function Relationships
Calcium Sensor Mechanism
SYT9 functions through calcium-induced conformational changes:
Comparison with Other Synaptotagmins
| Property | SYT1 | SYT9 | SYT7 |
|----------|------|------|------|
| Ca²⁺ affinity | High | Moderate | Low |
| Synchronous release | Major role | Supporting role | Minimal |
| Asynchronous release | Minor | Major | Major |
| Expression pattern | Universal | Region-specific | Ubiquitous |
Cellular Biology
Synaptic Vesicle Trafficking
SYT9 participates in vesicle lifecycle[@park2021]:
Endocytosis:
- Clathrin-mediated retrieval
- Endosomal sorting
- Vesicle reformation
- Vesicle recruitment from reserve
- Docking at active zones
- Priming for release
Membrane Dynamics
SYT9 affects presynaptic membrane organization:
- Active zone architecture
- Synaptic vesicle clustering
- Release site organization
Disease Mechanisms
Molecular Pathogenesis
SYT9 dysfunction leads to:
Alzheimer's Disease[@tian2021]:
- Aβ binding to SYT9 disrupts function
- Reduced expression contributes to failure
- Synaptic vesicle depletion
- Cognitive decline correlation
- α-Synuclein affects SYT9 localization
- Dopamine release deficits
- Vesicle pool abnormalities
- Selective vulnerability
- Altered release kinetics
- Circuit hyperexcitability
- Seizure threshold changes
- Network dysfunction
Cellular Stress Pathways
SYT9 deficiency activates:
- ER stress pathways
- Calcium overload
- Mitochondrial dysfunction
- Apoptotic cascades
Therapeutic Strategies
Current Approaches
Emerging Research
- Small molecule SYT9 modulators
- CRISPR-based editing
- Stem cell therapies
- Combination approaches
Clinical Considerations
Diagnosis
SYT9-related disorders:
- Genetic testing for variants
- Protein expression analysis
- Functional assays in neurons
Management
Current treatments:
- Symptomatic relief
- Seizure control when needed
- Supportive care
- Behavioral interventions
Prognosis
Disease outcomes:
- Variable based on mutation
- Age of onset affects progression
- Treatment availability
- Environmental factors
Model Systems
Animal Models
Mouse Models:
- SYT9 knockout: subtle phenotypes
- Transgenic overexpression
- Humanized models
- Morpholino knockdowns
- CRISPR mutants
- Behavioral assays
Cellular Models
Primary Cultures:
- Cortical neurons
- Hippocampal neurons
- Dopaminergic neurons
- iPSC-derived neurons
- Patient-specific lines
- 3D brain organoids
Future Directions
Research Priorities
Translation Goals
- SYT9-targeted clinical trials
- Biomarker standardization
- Personalized approaches
- Prevention strategies
▸Metadataorigin_type: v1_polymorphic_backfill
| slug | genes-syt9 |
| kg_node_id | SYT9 |
| entity_type | gene |
| origin_type | v1_polymorphic_backfill |
| source_table | wiki_pages |
| wiki_page_id | wp-122ffe494214 |
| __merged_from | {'merged_at': '2026-05-13', 'unprefixed_id': 'genes-syt9'} |
| _schema_version | 1 |
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