학술논문

DSCAM differentially modulates pre- and postsynaptic structural and functional central connectivity during visual system wiring
Document Type
article
Source
Neural Development. 13(1)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Neurosciences
Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision
Underpinning research
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Neurological
Eye
Animals
Avoidance Learning
Axons
Cell Adhesion Molecules
Dendrites
Down-Regulation
Gene Expression Regulation
Developmental
Image Processing
Computer-Assisted
Microscopy
Confocal
Morpholinos
Neurons
Photic Stimulation
Retina
Superior Colliculi
Synapses
Transfection
Vesicular Glutamate Transport Proteins
Vesicular Inhibitory Amino Acid Transport Proteins
Visual Pathways
Xenopus Proteins
Xenopus laevis
DSCAM
In vivo imaging
Dendritogenesis
Axon branching
Optic tectum
Retinal ganglion cell
Bipolar cell
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Psychology
Language
Abstract
BackgroundProper patterning of dendritic and axonal arbors is a critical step in the formation of functional neuronal circuits. Developing circuits rely on an array of molecular cues to shape arbor morphology, but the underlying mechanisms guiding the structural formation and interconnectivity of pre- and postsynaptic arbors in real time remain unclear. Here we explore how Down syndrome cell adhesion molecule (DSCAM) differentially shapes the dendritic morphology of central neurons and their presynaptic retinal ganglion cell (RGC) axons in the developing vertebrate visual system.MethodsThe cell-autonomous role of DSCAM, in tectal neurons and in RGCs, was examined using targeted single-cell knockdown and overexpression approaches in developing Xenopus laevis tadpoles. Axonal arbors of RGCs and dendritic arbors of tectal neurons were visualized using real-time in vivo confocal microscopy imaging over the course of 3 days.ResultsIn the Xenopus visual system, DSCAM immunoreactivity is present in RGCs, cells in the optic tectum and the tectal neuropil at the time retinotectal synaptic connections are made. Downregulating DSCAM in tectal neurons significantly increased dendritic growth and branching rates while inducing dendrites to take on tortuous paths. Overexpression of DSCAM, in contrast, reduced dendritic branching and growth rate. Functional deficits mediated by tectal DSCAM knockdown were examined using visually guided behavioral assays in swimming tadpoles, revealing irregular behavioral responses to visual stimulus. Functional deficits in visual behavior also corresponded with changes in VGLUT/VGAT expression, markers of excitatory and inhibitory transmission, in the tectum. Conversely, single-cell DSCAM knockdown in the retina revealed that RGC axon arborization at the target is influenced by DSCAM, where axons grew at a slower rate and remained relatively simple. In the retina, dendritic arbors of RGCs were not affected by the reduction of DSCAM expression.ConclusionsTogether, our observations implicate DSCAM in the control of both pre- and postsynaptic structural and functional connectivity in the developing retinotectal circuit, where it primarily acts as a neuronal brake to limit and guide postsynaptic dendrite growth of tectal neurons while it also facilitates arborization of presynaptic RGC axons cell autonomously.