RRC ID 53978
Author Zou W, Dong X, Broederdorf TR, Shen A, Kramer DA, Shi R, Liang X, Miller DM 3rd, Xiang YK, Yasuda R, Chen B, Shen K.
Title A Dendritic Guidance Receptor Complex Brings Together Distinct Actin Regulators to Drive Efficient F-Actin Assembly and Branching.
Journal Dev Cell
Abstract Proper morphogenesis of dendrites plays a fundamental role in the establishment of neural circuits. The molecular mechanism by which dendrites grow highly complex branches is not well understood. Here, using the Caenorhabditis elegans PVD neuron, we demonstrate that high-order dendritic branching requires actin polymerization driven by coordinated interactions between two membrane proteins, DMA-1 and HPO-30, with their cytoplasmic interactors, the RacGEF TIAM-1 and the actin nucleation promotion factor WAVE regulatory complex (WRC). The dendrite branching receptor DMA-1 directly binds to the PDZ domain of TIAM-1, while the claudin-like protein HPO-30 directly interacts with the WRC. On dendrites, DMA-1 and HPO-30 form a receptor-associated signaling complex to bring TIAM-1 and the WRC to close proximity, leading to elevated assembly of F-actin needed to drive high-order dendrite branching. The synergistic activation of F-actin assembly by scaffolding distinct actin regulators might represent a general mechanism in promoting complex dendrite arborization.
Volume 45(3)
Pages 362-375.e3
Published 2018-5-7
DOI 10.1016/j.devcel.2018.04.008
PII S1534-5807(18)30283-1
PMID 29738713
PMC PMC6292511
MeSH Actin Cytoskeleton / genetics Actin Cytoskeleton / metabolism* Animals Caenorhabditis elegans / genetics Caenorhabditis elegans / growth & development Caenorhabditis elegans / metabolism* Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins / genetics Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins / metabolism* Cell Membrane / metabolism Dendrites / genetics Dendrites / metabolism* Membrane Proteins / genetics Membrane Proteins / metabolism Morphogenesis / physiology* Neurogenesis / physiology* Sensory Receptor Cells / metabolism* Signal Transduction
IF 10.092
Times Cited 16
Resource
C.elegans tm1556