| Literature DB >> 31866821 |
Takatoshi Iijima1, Takeshi Yoshimura2.
Abstract
Alternative splicing is a powerful mechanism for molecular and functional diversification. In neurons, alternative splicing extensively controls various developmental steps as well as the plasticity and remodeling of neuronal activity in the adult brain. The axon initial segment (AIS) is the specialized compartment of proximal axons that initiates action potential (AP). At the AIS, the ion channels and cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) required for AP initiation are densely clustered via the scaffolding and cytoskeletal proteins. Notably, recent studies have elucidated that multiple AIS proteins are controlled by extensive alternative splicing in developing and adult brains. Here, we argue the potential role of dynamic regulation of alternative splicing in the development, specification, and functions of the AIS. In particular, we propose the novel concept that alternative splicing potentially modulates the structural and functional plasticity at the AIS.Entities:
Keywords: Rbfox; alternative splicing; ankyrin; axon initial segment; homeostatic plasticity; neurofascin; neuronal activity; spectrin
Year: 2019 PMID: 31866821 PMCID: PMC6906172 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2019.00295
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
List of Rbfox-targeted genes encoding representative axon initial segment (AIS) proteins.
| Cellular functions | Proteins (genes) | Altered exons (exon type) | Activity dependency | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cell adhesion | Neurofascin ( | Exon 26–29 (cassete) | Yes (primary neurons) | Suzuki et al. ( |
| Scaffolding | AnkyrinB ( | Exon 46 (cassete) | Non-informative | Jacko et al. ( |
| AnkyrinG ( | Exon 34 | Yes (P19 cells) | Lee et al. ( | |
| Ion channel | Nav1.6 ( | Exon 5 (cassete) Exon18 (mutually exclusive) | Non-informative | Gehman et al. ( |
| Kv7.2 ( | Exon 11 (cassete) | Non-informative | Gehman et al. ( | |
| Cav2.2 ( | Exon18 (cassete) Exon 25 (cassete) | Yes (Exon 25; P19 cells) | Lee et al. ( |
The table summarizes the genes that are alternatively spliced by Rbfox proteins. Non-informative.
Figure 1A Schematic representation illustrating the neuronal activity-regulated alternative splicing and homeostatic plasticity at the axon initial segment (AIS). (A) Model of activity-dependent molecular change by Rbfox1-mediated alternative splicing during AIS plasticity. Neuronal activity causes the nuclear accumulation of Rbfox1 and induces the inclusion of exons 26–29 at Nfasc through extracellular signal-regulated kinase/mitogen-activated protein kinase (ERK/MAPK) signaling. This could result in the replacement of NF140 with NF186 at the AIS. (B) Neuronal activity may modulate alternative splicing of genes for AIS proteins. Alternative splicing could contribute to AIS plasticity through changes in the structure and function.