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A dynamin-3 spliced variant modulates the actin/cortactin-dependent morphogenesis of dendritic spines
Author(s) -
Noah W. Gray,
Anne Kruchten,
Jing Chen,
Mark A. McNiven
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
journal of cell science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1477-9137
pISSN - 0021-9533
DOI - 10.1242/jcs.01711
Subject(s) - cortactin , biology , filopodia , dendritic filopodia , microbiology and biotechnology , dynamin , dendritic spine , pseudopodia , synaptogenesis , actin , actin remodeling of neurons , gtpase , neurite , morphogenesis , hippocampal formation , cytoskeleton , actin cytoskeleton , neuroscience , receptor , cell , in vitro , biochemistry , endocytosis , gene
Immature dendrites extend many actin-rich filopodial structures that can be replaced by synapse-containing dendritic spines as the neuron matures. The large GTPase dynamin-3 (Dyn3) is a component of the postsynapse in hippocampal neurons but its function is undefined. Here, we demonstrate that a specific Dyn3 variant (Dyn3baa) promotes the formation of immature dendritic filopodia in cultured neurons. This effect is dependent upon Dyn3 GTPase activity and a direct interaction with the F-actin-binding protein cortactin. Consistent with these findings, Dyn3baa binds to cortactin with a 200% higher affinity than Dyn3aaa, a near identical isoform that does not induce dendritic filopodia when expressed in cultured neurons. Finally, levels of Dyn3baa-encoding mRNA are tightly regulated during neuronal maturation and are markedly upregulated during synaptogenesis. Together, these findings provide the first evidence that an enhanced interaction between a specific Dyn3 splice variant and cortactin modulate actin-membrane dynamics in developing neurons to regulate the morphogenesis of dendritic spines.

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