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Periodic actin structures in neuronal axons are required to maintain microtubules

Authors :
Stephen E. D. Webb
Ines Hahn
Simon P. Pearce
Yue Qu
Andreas Prokop
Source :
Molecular Biology of the Cell, Qu, Y, Hahn, I, Webb, S, Pearce, S & Prokop, A 2017, ' Periodic actin structures in neuronal axons are required to maintain microtubules ', Molecular Biology of the Cell, vol. 28, no. 296-308, mbc.E16-10-0727, pp. 296-308 . https://doi.org/10.1091/mbc.E16-10-0727
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB), 2017.

Abstract

Drosophila genetics is combined with high-resolution microscopy and a number of functional readouts to demonstrate key factors required for the presence of regularly spaced rings of cortical actin in axons. The data suggest important roles for the actin rings in microtubule regulation, most likely by sustaining their polymerization.<br />Axons are cable-like neuronal processes wiring the nervous system. They contain parallel bundles of microtubules as structural backbones, surrounded by regularly spaced actin rings termed the periodic membrane skeleton (PMS). Despite being an evolutionarily conserved, ubiquitous, highly ordered feature of axons, the function of PMS is unknown. Here we studied PMS abundance, organization, and function, combining versatile Drosophila genetics with superresolution microscopy and various functional readouts. Analyses with 11 actin regulators and three actin-targeting drugs suggest that PMS contains short actin filaments that are depolymerization resistant and sensitive to spectrin, adducin, and nucleator deficiency, consistent with microscopy-derived models proposing PMS as specialized cortical actin. Upon actin removal, we observed gaps in microtubule bundles, reduced microtubule polymerization, and reduced axon numbers, suggesting a role of PMS in microtubule organization. These effects become strongly enhanced when carried out in neurons lacking the microtubule-stabilizing protein Short stop (Shot). Combining the aforementioned actin manipulations with Shot deficiency revealed a close correlation between PMS abundance and microtubule regulation, consistent with a model in which PMS-dependent microtubule polymerization contributes to their maintenance in axons. We discuss potential implications of this novel PMS function along axon shafts for axon maintenance and regeneration.

Details

ISSN :
19394586 and 10591524
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Biology of the Cell
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3e9bc726e77ae0d89c2df7d95dfbea16