Login / Signup

Spectrin condensates provide a nidus for assembling the periodic axonal structure.

Nicholas P BoyerRohan SharmaTheresa WiesnerAntoine DelamareFlorence PelletierChristophe LeterrierSubhojit Roy
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Coordinated assembly of individual components into higher-order structures is a defining theme in biology, but underlying principles are not well-understood. In neurons, α/β spectrins, adducin, and actinfilaments assemble into a lattice wrapping underneath the axonal plasma membrane, but mechanistic events leading to this periodic axonal structure (PAS) are unclear. Visualizing PAS components in axons as they develop, we found focal patches in distal axons containing spectrins and adducin (but sparse actin filaments) with biophysical properties reminiscent of biomolecular condensation. Overexpressing spectrin-repeats - constituents of α/β-spectrins - in heterologous cells triggered condensate formation, and preventing association of βII-spectrin with actin-filaments/membranes also facilitated condensation. Finally, overexpressing condensate-triggering spectrin repeats in neurons before PAS establishment disrupted the lattice, presumably by competing with innate assembly, supporting a functional role for biomolecular condensation. We propose a condensation-assembly model where PAS components form focal phase-separated condensates that eventually unfurl into a stable lattice-structure by associating with subplasmalemmal actin. By providing local 'depots' of assembly parts, biomolecular condensation may play a wider role in the construction of intricate cytoskeletal structures.
Keyphrases
  • spinal cord injury
  • spinal cord
  • immune response
  • induced apoptosis
  • cell migration
  • high resolution
  • cell cycle arrest
  • cell death
  • signaling pathway
  • optical coherence tomography
  • saccharomyces cerevisiae
  • neural network