4.7 Article

Wallerian degeneration of zebrafish trigeminal axons in the skin is required for regeneration and developmental pruning

Journal

DEVELOPMENT
Volume 137, Issue 23, Pages 3985-3994

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/dev.053611

Keywords

Wallerian; Axon; Degeneration; Pruning; Regeneration; Zebrafish

Funding

  1. NIDCR
  2. NINDS
  3. March of Dimes Foundation
  4. NICHD
  5. Burroughs-Wellcome Fund
  6. Whitehall Foundation
  7. Klingenstein Foundation

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Fragments of injured axons that detach from their cell body break down by the molecularly regulated process of Wallerian degeneration (WD). Although WD resembles local axon degeneration, a common mechanism for refining neuronal structure, several previously examined instances of developmental pruning were unaffected by WD pathways. We used laser axotomy and time-lapse confocal imaging to characterize and compare peripheral sensory axon WD and developmental pruning in live zebrafish larvae. Detached fragments of single injured axon arbors underwent three stereotyped phases of WD: a lag phase, a fragmentation phase and clearance. The lag phase was developmentally regulated, becoming shorter as embryos aged, while the length of the clearance phase increased with the amount of axon debris. Both cell-specific inhibition of ubiquitylation and overexpression of the Wallerian degeneration slow protein (WldS) lengthened the lag phase dramatically, but neither affected fragmentation. Persistent WldS-expressing axon fragments directly repelled regenerating axon branches of their parent arbor, similar to self-repulsion among sister branches of intact arbors. Expression of WldS also disrupted naturally occurring local axon pruning and axon degeneration in spontaneously dying trigeminal neurons: although pieces of WldS-expressing axons were pruned, and some WldS-expressing cells still died during development, in both cases detached axon fragments failed to degenerate. We propose that spontaneously pruned fragments of peripheral sensory axons must be removed by a WD-like mechanism to permit efficient innervation of the epidermis.

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