| Literature DB >> 29972794 |
Kelly Kawabata Galbraith1, Kazuto Fujishima2, Hiroaki Mizuno3, Sung-Jin Lee4, Takeshi Uemura4, Kenji Sakimura5, Masayoshi Mishina6, Naoki Watanabe7, Mineko Kengaku8.
Abstract
Dendritic filopodia of developing neurons function as environmental sensors, regulating the spatial organization of dendrites and proper targeting to presynaptic partners. Dendritic filopodia morphology is determined by the balance of F-actin assembled via two major nucleating pathways, the ARP2/3 complex and formins. The inverse-BAR protein MTSS1 is highly expressed in Purkinje cells (PCs) and has been shown to upregulate ARP2/3 activity. PCs in MTSS1 conditional knockout mice showed dendrite hypoplasia due to excessive contact-induced retraction during development. This phenotype was concomitant with elongated dendritic filopodia and was phenocopied by overactivation of the actin nucleator formin DAAM1 localized in the tips of PC dendritic protrusions. Cell biology assays including single-molecule speckle microscopy demonstrated that MTSS1's C terminus binds to DAAM1 and paused DAAM1-mediated F-actin polymerization. Thus, MTSS1 plays a dual role as a formin inhibitor and ARP2/3 activator in dendritic filopodia, determining final neuronal morphology.Entities:
Keywords: ARP2/3; DAAM1; MTSS1; Purkinje cell; actin; dendrite; filopodia; formin; neuron; spine
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29972794 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2018.06.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423