Differential adhesion regulates neurite placement via a retrograde zippering mechanism

Author:

Sengupta Titas1ORCID,Koonce Noelle L1,Vázquez-Martínez Nabor1,Moyle Mark W1,Duncan Leighton H1,Emerson Sarah E1,Han Xiaofei2,Shao Lin1,Wu Yicong2,Santella Anthony3,Fan Li3,Bao Zhirong3ORCID,Mohler William A4,Shroff Hari25,Colón-Ramos Daniel A1567ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neuroscience and Department of Cell Biology, Yale University School of Medicine

2. Laboratory of High Resolution Optical Imaging, National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, National Institutes of Health

3. Developmental Biology Program, Sloan Kettering Institute

4. Department of Genetics and Genome Sciences and Center for Cell Analysis and Modeling, University of Connecticut Health Center

5. MBL Fellows, Marine Biological Laboratory

6. Wu Tsai Institute, Yale University

7. Instituto de Neurobiología, Recinto de Ciencias Médicas, Universidad de Puerto Rico

Abstract

During development, neurites and synapses segregate into specific neighborhoods or layers within nerve bundles. The developmental programs guiding placement of neurites in specific layers, and hence their incorporation into specific circuits, are not well understood. We implement novel imaging methods and quantitative models to document the embryonic development of the C. elegans brain neuropil, and discover that differential adhesion mechanisms control precise placement of single neurites onto specific layers. Differential adhesion is orchestrated via developmentally regulated expression of the IgCAM SYG-1, and its partner ligand SYG-2. Changes in SYG-1 expression across neuropil layers result in changes in adhesive forces, which sort SYG-2-expressing neurons. Sorting to layers occurs, not via outgrowth from the neurite tip, but via an alternate mechanism of retrograde zippering, involving interactions between neurite shafts. Our study indicates that biophysical principles from differential adhesion govern neurite placement and synaptic specificity in vivo in developing neuropil bundles.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Marine Biological Laboratory

Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

Gruber Foundation

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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