Axons reprogram when
intermediate targets (choice
points) are encountered
After transit of the
midline, commissural
axons lose their
responsiveness to netrins
Explains why, in the hindbrain,
commisural axons are able to continue
past the floor plate without turning
But in the spinal cord,
commissural axons turn
after crossing the floor plate
Commissural axons also
become sensitive to repellants
after crossing the floor plate
Why don't these
go straight on after
crossing like those
of the hindbrain?
Inhibitory molecules in
floor plate are semaphorins
and slits
Also present in
ventral spinal cord
Creating a channel through
which commissural axons
grow
How?
Clues from drosophila
As in vertebrate cells, insect midline glial cells express
diffusible attractants (netrins) and cell surface repellants (slits)
Also as in vertebrates, some axons
cross forming commissures, and then
turn to join longitudinal pathways
formed by axons that have not crossed
What controls whether axons cross
or not, and if they cross, what
prevents them from recrossing?
Genetic screens
identified mutants in
which these
processes went
wrong
Robo and comm mutants
Robo
Encodes a
receptor for the
inhibitory protein
slit
Expressed at high
levels on axons that
dont cross the
midline
Commissural axons initially
express low levels but high
levels after they cross
Robo mutant
No robo protein
Slit is no longer detected
All axons go back and forth
across midline - forming
roundabouts of axons
Comm is expressed only in
those neurons that normally
cross the midline and is
switched off after they cross
Comm
Comm mutant
Comm
protein
missing
Robo protein express at high levels in
those cells that normally cross the midline
Now extend their
axons
longitudinally
If expression forced in all neurons, robo is lost everywhere
resulting in a phenotype
just like robo mutant
I.e. comm controls robo
How?
Robo is prevented from
functioning before midline
crossing in both flies and mice
Comm encodes a traffiking
protein that prevents robo from
reaching the cell surface
means that growth cone cannot receive slit
inhibitory signals before crossing
Also
Vertebrate
homologs
of robo
One of these,
robo1, is expressed
on commissural
axons
However, it is expressed both
before and after crossing
No comm
homolog in
vertebrates
However, a second
robo-like protein Rig1 (aka
robo3) is expressed only in
pre-crossing fibres
Appears to block robo1 signalling
until the midline is crossed
Loss of Rig1 results in a
failure of commissural axons
to reach the mindline (floor
plate)
Conclusion
Thus, although there may
be differences in detail
between vertebrates and
invertebrates, the general
mechanism is similar and
axons are indeed
reprogrammed along their
pathway
Axon scaffold
Established by
pioneer navigation
Follower axons can follow
How to stay on the scaffold?
How to get off
when target is
reached
FasII adhesion
also controls
defasiculation
Overexpression of
fasII leads to a 'by
pass' phenotype
The red and blue motor axons fail to
defasiculate and so miss their targets
FasII and other CAM adhesion
can also be regulated by
expression of other proteins
E.g. BEAT
Interfere with
CAM-mediated
adhesion
How are targets
chosen once in target
area?
Two main types
Discrete targets
"cellular"
In Grasshopper and Drosophila, ablation
of specific target muscles (by ablation of
muscle precursor cells) leads to failure of
relevant motor axons to leave main motor
trunk at appropriate branch points
Suggests axons are looking for specific labels on their targets
Insect muscles carry a diverse
set of molecules that together
may constitute muscle 'address
labels'
Netrin
Expressed in
specific muscles
Loss of netrin is exactly
like ablating the muscles
The axons wander and
do not make synapses
(even though the muscle
is there)
Ectopic netrin leads to axons
innervating the wrong
muscles
Fasciclin 3
Expressed in specific
muscles and the motor axons
that normally innervate them
Ectopic expression of Fas3 leads
Fas3-expressing axons (the red
ones!) to innervate new targets
Multiple cues seem
to combine to make
'address labels'
Topographic maps
"multicellular"
When neighbouring neurons send
axons to neighbouring sites in their
target to maintain the topology (order)
in the target, e.g. retinotectal system
could this be achieved?
Sperry proposed two possibilities
1) Each axon has a unique
label complementary to a
unique label in the target. (cf
address labels in fly muscle)
Number of different
labels needed seems
implausably high
2) That a co-ordinate system, encoded by gradients
of signalling molecules, stamps a "latitude and
longitude" onto cells of the target. This would be
read by complementary gradients of receptors
expressed in the retinal ganglion cells.
Evidence
The “Stripe Assay” shows that cells from
posterior tectum make a non-permissive
factor that repels temporal retinal axons
The inhibitory factor in the
posterior tectum turns out to be
two ephrins which are, as Sperry
predicted, expressed in a gradient
from posterior (hi) to anterior (lo)
As also predicted by Sperry,
an Eph receptor for ephrins
A2 & A5 is expressed in the
retina in a counter gradient
from temporal (hi) to nasal (lo)
In mice in which both Ephrin A2 and A5 are knocked out,
temporal neurons project their axons into the posterior
tectum and the topographic map is disordered
Conclusion
non-permissive, repellant factors can be used
instructively - ie they can direct growth cones to
specific places - to form topographic maps
Both involve
controlling
fasiculation
In simplest form involves
homophilic binding by cell
adhesion molecules (CAM's)
E.g. fasiculin II in insects
Controls fasiculation in flies
FasII mutants (no
fasII) have many
defasiculated axons
Overexpression of
fasII leads to novel
fasiculations
Homophilic 'like for like'
interactions can bind two cell
surfaces together
In cells that do not
normally adhere, FasII
can cause aggregation
Fasiculation =
arrangement in
bundles
Target derived factors
feedback from the target is
key in determining the survival,
phenotype and morphology of
innervating neurons
target-derived factors are
critical in formation of the
monosynaptic stretch reflex
Target-derived factors
determine dendritic
morphology and
connectivity
MNs innervating the triceps and pectoral
muscles develop monosynaptic connections
directly with PNs, whereas those innervating
the cutaneous maximus (CM) and latissimus
dorsi (LD) receive polysynaptic input from
interneurons (IN).
This is controlled by
GDNF* secreted from
the CM and LD muscles,
which turns on the
transcription factor (TF)
Pea3 in the MNs
Loss of Pea3 results in MNs
innervating CM/LD that have
the dendritic morphology of
Tri and Pec-innervating MNs
and aberrant proprioceptive
connections
Circuit completion relies
on target feedback
Similarly, muscle-expressed neurotrophin-3
(NT3) induces the expression of the TF Er81
by Ia proprioceptors (PNs)
Knockout of Er81 leads to a failure of the Ia
central projection to reach the ventral horn
and form monosynaptic connections with
the appropriate MNs
Thus, feedback from the target determines the
final patterns of both dendritic and axonal
connections in the monosynaptic spinal reflex (and
elsewhere)