Quantitative mapping of dense microtubule arrays in mammalian neurons

Publication date

2021-07-27

Authors

Katrukha, Eugene A.ISNI 0000000492896501
Jurriens, DaphneISNI 0000000506769598
Salas Pastene, Desiree MISNI 0000000507309550
Kapitein, Lukas C.ISNI 0000000389218112

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

The neuronal microtubule cytoskeleton underlies the polarization and proper functioning of neurons, amongst others by providing tracks for motor proteins that drive intracellular transport. Different subsets of neuronal microtubules, varying in composition, stability, and motor preference, are known to exist, but the high density of microtubules has so far precluded mapping their relative abundance and three-dimensional organization. Here, we use different super-resolution techniques (STED, Expansion Microscopy) to explore the nanoscale organization of the neuronal microtubule network in rat hippocampal neurons. This revealed that in dendrites acetylated microtubules are enriched in the core of the dendritic shaft, while tyrosinated microtubules are enriched near the plasma membrane, thus forming a shell around the acetylated microtubules. Moreover, using a novel analysis pipeline we quantified the absolute number of acetylated and tyrosinated microtubules within dendrites and found that they account for 65-75% and ~20-30% of all microtubules, respectively, leaving only few microtubules that do not fall in either category. Because these different microtubule subtypes facilitate different motor proteins, these novel insights help to understand the spatial regulation of intracellular transport.

Keywords

Acetylation, Animals, Developmental Biology, Female, Hippocampus/metabolism, Kinesins/metabolism, Male, Microtubules/metabolism, Neurons/cytology, Protein Processing, Post-Translational, Rats, Tubulin/metabolism

Citation

Katrukha, E A, Jurriens, D, Salas Pastene, D M & Kapitein, L C 2021, 'Quantitative mapping of dense microtubule arrays in mammalian neurons', eLife, vol. 10, 10:e67925, pp. 1-25. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.67925