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Centrosome-mediated microtubule remodeling during axon formation in human iPSC-derived neurons

Authors :
Lindhout, Feline W.
Portegies, Sybren
Kooistra, Robbelien
Herstel, Lotte J.
Stucchi, Riccardo
Hummel, Jessica J.A.
Scheefhals, Nicky
Katrukha, Eugene A.
Altelaar, Maarten
MacGillavry, Harold D.
Wierenga, Corette J.
Hoogenraad, Casper C.
Celbiologie
Biomolecular Mass Spectrometry and Proteomics
Sub Cell Biology
Afd Biomol.Mass Spect. and Proteomics
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Axon formation critically relies on local microtubule remodeling and marks the first step in establishing neuronal polarity. However, the function of the microtubule-organizing centrosomes during the onset of axon formation is still under debate. Here, we demonstrate that centrosomes play an essential role in controlling axon formation in human-induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived neurons. Depleting centrioles, the core components of centrosomes, in unpolarized human neuronal stem cells results in various axon developmental defects at later stages, including immature action potential firing, mislocalization of axonal microtubule-associated Trim46 proteins, suppressed expression of growth cone proteins, and affected growth cone morphologies. Live-cell imaging of microtubules reveals that centriole loss impairs axonal microtubule reorganization toward the unique parallel plus-end out microtubule bundles during early development. We propose that centrosomes mediate microtubule remodeling during early axon development in human iPSC-derived neurons, thereby laying the foundation for further axon development and function.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od.......101..fab66d9eb85435dcd8d6708320c08166