4.8 Article

Developmental Axon Pruning Requires Destabilization of Cell Adhesion by JNK Signaling

Journal

NEURON
Volume 88, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2015.10.023

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Funding

  1. NICHD
  2. Minerva Foundation [711744]
  3. National Institute for Psychobiology in Israel (NIPI) [12205]
  4. Israel Science Foundation (ISF) [614/11]
  5. Women Health Research Center

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Developmental axon pruning is essential for normal brain wiring in vertebrates and invertebrates. How axon pruning occurs in vivo is not well understood. In a mosaic loss-of-function screen, we found that Bsk, the Drosophila JNK, is required for axon pruning of mushroom body gamma neurons, but not their dendrites. By combining in vivo genetics, biochemistry, and high-resolution microscopy, we demonstrate that the mechanism by which Bsk is required for pruning is through reducing the membrane levels of the adhesion molecule Fasciclin II (FasII), the NCAM ortholog. Conversely, overexpression of FasII is sufficient to inhibit axon pruning. Finally, we show that overexpressing other cell adhesion molecules, together with weak attenuation of JNK signaling, strongly inhibits pruning. Taken together, we have uncovered a novel and unexpected interaction between the JNK pathway and cell adhesion and found that destabilization of cell adhesion is necessary for efficient pruning.

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