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Flux of signalling endosomes undergoing axonal retrograde transport is encoded by presynaptic activity and TrkB.

Tong WangSally MartinTam H NguyenCallista B HarperRachel S GormalRamon Martínez-MármolShanker KarunanithiElizabeth J CoulsonNick R GlassJustin J Cooper-WhiteBruno van SwinderenFrédéric A Meunier
Published in: Nature communications (2016)
Axonal retrograde transport of signalling endosomes from the nerve terminal to the soma underpins survival. As each signalling endosome carries a quantal amount of activated receptors, we hypothesized that it is the frequency of endosomes reaching the soma that determines the scale of the trophic signal. Here we show that upregulating synaptic activity markedly increased the flux of plasma membrane-derived retrograde endosomes (labelled using cholera toxin subunit-B: CTB) in hippocampal neurons cultured in microfluidic devices, and live Drosophila larval motor neurons. Electron and super-resolution microscopy analyses revealed that the fast-moving sub-diffraction-limited CTB carriers contained the TrkB neurotrophin receptor, transiently activated by synaptic activity in a BDNF-independent manner. Pharmacological and genetic inhibition of TrkB activation selectively prevented the coupling between synaptic activity and the retrograde flux of signalling endosomes. TrkB activity therefore controls the encoding of synaptic activity experienced by nerve terminals, digitalized as the flux of retrogradely transported signalling endosomes.
Keyphrases
  • spinal cord injury
  • escherichia coli
  • high throughput
  • mass spectrometry
  • single cell
  • genome wide
  • brain injury
  • optical coherence tomography
  • circulating tumor cells
  • zika virus