The mechanism of axon growth and guidance is a core, unsolved problem in neuroscience and cell biology. For nearly three decades, our view of this process has largely been based on deterministic models of motility derived from studies of neurons cultured in vitro on rigid substrates. Here, we suggest a fundamentally different, inherently probabilistic model of axon growth, one that is grounded in the stochastic dynamics of actin networks. This perspective is motivated and supported by a synthesis of results from live imaging of a specific axon growing in its native tissue in vivo , together with single-molecule computational simulations of actin dynamics. In particular, we show how axon growth arises from a small spatial bias in the intrinsic fluctuations of the axonal actin cytoskeleton, one that produces net translocation of the axonal actin network by differentially modulating local probabilities of network expansion versus compaction. We discuss the relationship between this model and current views of axon growth and guidance mechanism and demonstrate how it offers explanations for various longstanding puzzles in this field. We further point out the implications of the probabilistic nature of actin dynamics for many other processes of cell morphology and motility.
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Enabled primarily controls filopodial morphology, not actin organization, in the TSM1 growth cone in Drosophila
Ena/VASP proteins are processive actin polymerases that are required throughout animal phylogeny for many morphogenetic processes, including axon growth and guidance. Here we use in vivo live imaging of morphology and actin distribution to determine the role of Ena in promoting the growth of the TSM1 axon of the Drosophila wing. Altering Ena activity causes stalling and misrouting of TSM1. Our data show that Ena has a substantial impact on filopodial morphology in this growth cone but exerts only modest effects on actin distribution. This is in contrast to the main regulator of Ena, Abl tyrosine kinase, which was shown previously to have profound effects on actin and only mild effects on TSM1 growth cone morphology. We interpret these data as suggesting that the primary role of Ena in this axon may be to link actin to morphogenetic processes of the plasma membrane, rather than for regulating actin organization itself. These data also suggest that a key role of Ena, acting downstream of Abl, may be to maintain consistent organization and reliable evolution of growth cone structure, even as Abl activity varies in response to guidance cues in the environment.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2102684
- PAR ID:
- 10421891
- Editor(s):
- Gupton, Stephanie L
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Molecular Biology of the Cell
- ISSN:
- 1059-1524
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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