Structural plasticity of actin-spectrin membrane skeleton and functional role of actin and spectrin in axon degeneration
Sensory Receptor Cells
QH301-705.5
Science
neurotrophins
Mice
03 medical and health sciences
super-resolution microscopy
Animals
Biology (General)
Cells, Cultured
Cytoskeleton
0303 health sciences
Q
Cell Membrane
R
Spectrin
cytoskeleton
Cell Biology
axon degeneration
Actins
spectrin
Nerve Degeneration
Medicine
actin
Signal Transduction
DOI:
10.7554/elife.38730
Publication Date:
2019-05-01T15:00:10Z
AUTHORS (11)
ABSTRACT
Axon degeneration sculpts neuronal connectivity patterns during development and is an early hallmark of several adult-onset neurodegenerative disorders. Substantial progress has been made in identifying effector mechanisms driving axon fragmentation, but less is known about the upstream signaling pathways that initiate this process. Here, we investigate the behavior of the actin-spectrin-based Membrane-associated Periodic Skeleton (MPS), and effects of actin and spectrin manipulations in sensory axon degeneration. We show that trophic deprivation (TD) of mouse sensory neurons causes a rapid disassembly of the axonal MPS, which occurs prior to protein loss and independently of caspase activation. Actin destabilization initiates TD-related retrograde signaling needed for degeneration; actin stabilization prevents MPS disassembly and retrograde signaling during TD. Depletion of βII-spectrin, a key component of the MPS, suppresses retrograde signaling and protects axons against degeneration. These data demonstrate structural plasticity of the MPS and suggest its potential role in early steps of axon degeneration.
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