Lattice light-sheet microscopy and evaluation of dendritic transport in cultured hippocampal tissue reveal high variability in mobility of the KIF1A motor domain and entry into dendritic spines

Autor(en): Rierola, Marina
Trushina, Nataliya I.
Holtmannspötter, Michael
Kurre, Rainer 
Bakota, Lidia
Stichwörter: Dendrite; Hippocampus; KIF1A; Organotypic tissue culture; Transport
Erscheinungsdatum: 2023
Journal: Brain Research Bulletin
Volumen: 194
Startseite: 13
Seitenende: 22
Zusammenfassung: 
The unique morphology of neurons consists of a long axon and a highly variable arbour of dendritic processes, which assort neuronal cells into the main classes. The dendritic tree serves as the main domain for receiving synaptic input. Therefore, to maintain the structure and to be able to plastically change according to the incoming stimuli, molecules and organelles need to be readily available. This is achieved mainly via bi-directional transport of cargo along the microtubule lattices. Analysis of dendritic transport is lagging behind the investigation of axonal transport. Moreover, addressing transport mechanisms in tissue environment is very challenging and, therefore, rare. We employed high-speed volumetric lattice light-sheet microscopy and single particle tracking of truncated KIF1A motor protein lacking the cargo-binding domain. We focused our analysis on dendritic processes of CA1 pyramidal neurons in cultured hippocampal tissue. Analysis of individual trajectories revealed detailed information about stalling and high variability in movement and speed, and biased directionality of KIF1A. Furthermore, we could also observe KIF1A shortly entering into dendritic spines. We provide a workflow to analyse variations in the speed and direction of motor protein movement in dendrites that are either intrinsic properties of the motor domain or depend on the structure and modification of the microtubule trails.
ISSN: 0361-9230
DOI: 10.1016/j.brainresbull.2022.12.012
Externe URL: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0361923022003537

Zur Langanzeige

Seitenaufrufe

1
Letzte Woche
0
Letzter Monat
0
geprüft am 18.05.2024

Google ScholarTM

Prüfen

Altmetric