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Precise regulation of the guidance receptor DMA-1 by KPC-1/Furin instructs dendritic branching decisions.

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posted on 2016-06-13, 00:00 authored by X Dong, H Chiu, YJ Park, W Zou, Y Zou, E Özkan, C Chang, K Shen
Extracellular adhesion molecules and their neuronal receptors guide the growth and branching of axons and dendrites. Growth cones are attracted to intermediate targets, but they must switch their response upon arrival so that they can move away and complete the next stage of growth. Here, we show that KPC-1, a C. elegans Furin homolog, regulates the level of the branching receptor DMA-1 on dendrites by targeting it to late endosomes. In kpc-1 mutants, the level of DMA-1 is abnormally high on dendrites, resulting in trapping of dendrites at locations where a high level of the cognate ligand, the adhesion molecule SAX-7/L1, is present. The misregulation of DMA-1 also causes dendritic self-avoidance defects. Thus, precise regulation of guidance receptors creates flexibility of responses to guidance signals and is critical for neuronal morphogenesis.

Funding

Howard Hughes Medical Institute, National Institutes of Health 1R01NS082208-01A1, National Institutes of Health 5R01GM111320, National Science Foundation, and the Esther A. and Joseph Klingenstein Fund.

History

Publisher Statement

This is a copy of an article published in eLife © 2016 eLife Sciences Publications. © Dong et al.

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications

Language

  • en_US

Issue date

2016-03-14

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