Jakobs Maximilian A H, Franze Kristian, Zemel Assaf
Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Institute of Dental Sciences and Fritz Haber Center for Molecular Dynamics, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel.
Biophys J. 2020 Apr 21;118(8):1914-1920. doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2020.02.031. Epub 2020 Mar 14.
The densely packed microtubule (MT) array found in neuronal cell projections (neurites) serves two fundamental functions simultaneously: it provides a mechanically stable track for molecular motor-based transport and produces forces that drive neurite growth. The local pattern of MT polarity along the neurite shaft has been found to differ between axons and dendrites. In axons, the neurons' dominating long projections, roughly 90% of the MTs orient with their rapidly growing plus end away from the cell body, whereas in vertebrate dendrites, their orientations are locally mixed. Molecular motors are known to be responsible for cytoskeletal ordering and force generation, but their collective function in the dense MT cytoskeleton of neurites remains elusive. We here hypothesized that both the polarity pattern of MTs along the neurite shaft and the shaft's global extension are simultaneously driven by molecular motor forces and should thus be regulated by the mechanical load acting on the MT array as a whole. To investigate this, we simulated cylindrical bundles of MTs that are cross-linked and powered by molecular motors by iteratively solving a set of force-balance equations. The bundles were subjected to a fixed load arising from actively generated tension in the actomyosin cortex enveloping the MTs. The magnitude of the load and the level of motor-induced connectivity between the MTs have been varied systematically. With an increasing load and decreasing motor-induced connectivity between MTs, the bundles became wider in cross section and extended more slowly, and the local MT orientational order was reduced. These results reveal two, to our knowledge, novel mechanical factors that may underlie the distinctive development of the MT cytoskeleton in axons and dendrites: the cross-linking level of MTs by motors and the load acting on this cytoskeleton during growth.
在神经元细胞突起(神经突)中发现的紧密排列的微管(MT)阵列同时具有两个基本功能:它为基于分子马达的运输提供了机械稳定的轨道,并产生驱动神经突生长的力。已发现轴突和树突中沿神经突轴的MT极性局部模式有所不同。在轴突中,神经元主要的长突起,大约90%的MT以其快速生长的正端远离细胞体的方向排列,而在脊椎动物的树突中,它们的方向是局部混合的。已知分子马达负责细胞骨架的有序排列和力的产生,但它们在神经突密集的MT细胞骨架中的集体功能仍然难以捉摸。我们在此假设,沿神经突轴的MT极性模式和轴的整体延伸同时由分子马达力驱动,因此应该受到作用于整个MT阵列的机械负荷的调节。为了研究这一点,我们通过迭代求解一组力平衡方程,模拟了由分子马达交联并驱动的MT圆柱束。这些束受到由包裹MT的肌动球蛋白皮质中主动产生的张力引起的固定负荷。负荷的大小和马达诱导的MT之间的连接水平已被系统地改变。随着负荷增加和马达诱导的MT之间的连接减少,束的横截面变宽且延伸更慢,并且局部MT取向有序性降低。据我们所知,这些结果揭示了两个可能是轴突和树突中MT细胞骨架独特发育基础的新的机械因素:马达对MT的交联水平以及生长过程中作用于该细胞骨架的负荷。