Author:
Varandas Katherine C.,Hodges Brianna M.,Lubeck Lauren,Farinas Amelia,Liang Yupu,Lu Yun,Shaham Shai
Abstract
SUMMARYNeurons have elaborate structures that determine their connectivity and functions. Changes in neuronal structure accompany learning and memory formation and are hallmarks of neurological disease. Here we show that glia monitor dendrite structure and respond to dendrite perturbation. InC. elegansmutants with defective sensory-organ dendrite cilia, adjacent glia accumulate extracellular matrix-laden vesicles, secrete excess matrix around cilia, alter gene expression, and change their secreted protein repertoire. Inducible cilia disruption reveals that this response is acute. DGS-1, a 7-transmembrane domain neuronal protein, and FIG-1, a multifunctional thrombospondin-domain glial protein, are required for glial detection of cilia integrity, and exhibit mutually-dependent localization to and around cilia, respectively. While inhibiting glial secretion disrupts dendritic cilia properties, hyperactivating the glial response protects against dendrite damage. Our studies uncover a homeostatic protective dendrite-glia interaction and suggest that similar signaling occurs at other sensory structures and at synapses, which resemble sensory organs in architecture and molecules.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory