Preferential transport of synaptic vesicles across neuronal branches is regulated by the levels of the anterograde motor UNC-104/KIF1A in vivo.
Amruta VasudevanNeena RatnakaranKaushalya MurthyShikha KumariDavid H HallSandhya P KoushikaPublished in: Genetics (2024)
Asymmetric transport of cargo across axonal branches is a field of active research. Mechanisms contributing to preferential cargo transport along specific branches in vivo in wild type neurons are poorly understood. We find that anterograde synaptic vesicles preferentially enter the synaptic branch or pause at the branch point in C. elegans PLM neurons. The synaptic vesicle anterograde kinesin motor UNC-104/KIF1A regulates this vesicle behaviour at the branch point. Reduced levels of functional UNC-104 cause vesicles to predominantly pause at the branch point and lose their preference for turning into the synaptic branch. SAM-4/Myrlysin, which aids in recruitment/activation of UNC-104 on synaptic vesicles, regulates vesicle behaviour at the branch point similar to UNC-104. Increasing the levels of UNC-104 increases the preference of vesicles to go straight towards the asynaptic end. This suggests that the neuron optimises UNC-104 levels on the cargo surface to maximise the fraction of vesicles entering the branch and minimise the fraction going to the asynaptic end.