Transport of synaptic vesicles is modulated by vesicular reversals and stationary cargo clusters

Author:

Vasudevan Amruta1ORCID,Maiya Reshma23ORCID,Venkatesh Keertana1ORCID,Kumar Vinod2ORCID,Sood Parul1ORCID,Murthy Kausalya4ORCID,Koushika Sandhya P.1ORCID,Menon Gautam I.235ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Tata Institute of Fundamental Research 1 Department of Biological Sciences , , Homi Bhabha Road, Colaba, Mumbai 400 005 , India

2. The Institute of Mathematical Sciences 2 , CIT Campus, Taramani, Chennai 600 113 , India

3. Homi Bhabha National Institute 3 , Training School Complex, Anushaktinagar, Mumbai 400 094 , India

4. NCBS-TIFR 4 Neurobiology , , Bellary Road, Bengaluru 560 065 , India

5. Ashoka University 5 Departments of Physics & Biology , , Plot No. 2, Rajiv Gandhi Education City, National Capital Region, P.O. Rai, Sonepat 131 029 , India

Abstract

ABSTRACT Stationary clusters of vesicles are a prominent feature of axonal transport, but little is known about their physiological and functional relevance to axonal transport. Here, we investigated the role of vesicle motility characteristics in modulating the formation and lifetimes of such stationary clusters, and their effect on cargo flow. We developed a simulation model describing key features of axonal cargo transport, benchmarking the model against experiments in the posterior lateral mechanosensory neurons of Caenorhabditis elegans. Our simulations included multiple microtubule tracks and varied cargo motion states, and account for dynamic cargo–cargo interactions. Our model also incorporates static obstacles to vesicle transport in the form of microtubule ends, stalled vesicles and stationary mitochondria. We demonstrate, both in simulations and in an experimental system, that a reduction in reversal rates is associated with a higher proportion of long-lived stationary vesicle clusters and reduced net anterograde transport. Our simulations support the view that stationary clusters function as dynamic reservoirs of cargo vesicles, and reversals aid cargo in navigating obstacles and regulate cargo transport by modulating the proportion of stationary vesicle clusters along the neuronal process.

Funder

Department of Atomic Energy, Government of India

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Mechanobiology Institute, Singapore

National University of Singapore

Ashoka University

Department of Biotechnology, Ministry of Science and Technology, India

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Cell Biology

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1. First person – Amruta Vasudevan and Reshma Maiya;Journal of Cell Science;2023-06-15

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