Conference Agenda

Session
Key Note 1: Kang Shen
Time:
Thursday, 02/May/2024:
4:15pm - 5:15pm

Session Chair: Volker Haucke
Location: MDC.C Axon 1


Presentations
4:15pm - 5:15pm
ID: 203 / Key Note 1: 1
Talk

Morphological and Cytoskeletal Polarization during Neuronal Development

Kang Shen

Stanford University, United States of America

Polarized growth and branching of axon and dendrites are the structural basis of neural circuit formation. Coincide with the morphogenesis, neuronal cytoskeleton is arranged to achieve polarized transport. The molecular mechanisms of these polarization events are not well understood for in vivo systems. I will share our recent understanding of how stereotyped dendritic arbors are established and how neuronal microtubules are patterned to support polarized transport.

Stereotyped dendritic arbors are shaped by dynamic and stochastic growth during neuronal development. It remains unclear how guidance receptors and ligands coordinate branch dynamic growth, retraction, and stabilization to specify dendritic arbors. We previously showed that extracellular ligand SAX-7/LICAM dictates the shape of the PVD sensory neuron via binding to the dendritic guidance receptor DMA-1, a single transmembrane adhesion molecule. Here, we perform structure-function analyses of DMA-1 and unexpectedly find that robust, stochastic dendritic growth does not require ligand-binding. Instead, ligand-binding inhibits growth, prevents retraction, and specifies arbor shape. Furthermore, we demonstrate that dendritic growth requires a pool of ligand-free DMA-1, which is maintained by receptor endocytosis and reinsertion to the plasma membrane via recycling endosomes. Mutants defective of DMA-1 endocytosis show severely truncated dendritic arbors. We present a model in which ligand-free guidance receptor mediates intrinsic, stochastic dendritic growth, while extracellular ligands instruct dendrite shape by inhibiting growth.