Components of calcium channels play a decisive role in synapse formation. This is the surprising conclusionof a study comprising more than a decade of research, owing to the involved experimental challenges. The findings were published in PNAS today. The laboratory within the Mental Health & Neuroscience research program at the Karl Landsteiner University of Health Sciences in Krems, Austria (KL Krems) focuses on neuronal functions of regulatory proteins of so-called voltage-gated calcium channels. Over the recent years these proteins—named α2δ – have emerged as important regulators of synaptic transmission between nerve cells. The present finding of these proteins critically regulating the formation of excitatory synapses in the central nervous system, however, came as a surprise.