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Growth cone-localized microtubule organizing center establishes microtubule orientation in dendrites

Xing Liang, Marcela Kokes, Richard D. Fetter, Maria D. Sallee, Adrian W. Moore, Jessica L. Feldman, Kang Shen

2020eLife63 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A polarized arrangement of neuronal microtubule arrays is the foundation of membrane trafficking and subcellular compartmentalization. Conserved among both invertebrates and vertebrates, axons contain exclusively ‘plus-end-out’ microtubules while dendrites contain a high percentage of ‘minus-end-out’ microtubules, the origins of which have been a mystery. Here we show that in Caenorhabditis elegans the dendritic growth cone contains a non-centrosomal microtubule organizing center (MTOC), which generates minus-end-out microtubules along outgrowing dendrites and plus-end-out microtubules in the growth cone. RAB-11-positive endosomes accumulate in this region and co-migrate with the microtubule nucleation complex γ-TuRC. The MTOC tracks the extending growth cone by kinesin-1/UNC-116-mediated endosome movements on distal plus-end-out microtubules and dynein clusters this advancing MTOC. Critically, perturbation of the function or localization of the MTOC causes reversed microtubule polarity in dendrites. These findings unveil the endosome-localized dendritic MTOC as a critical organelle for establishing axon-dendrite polarity.

Topics & Concepts

Microtubule organizing centerMicrotubuleGrowth coneCell biologyDyneinMicrotubule nucleationBiologyAxonEndosomeCentrosomeIntracellularCellGeneticsCell cycleMicrotubule and mitosis dynamicsGenetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model OrganismsPhotosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms
Growth cone-localized microtubule organizing center establishes microtubule orientation in dendrites | Litcius