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Protein 4.1B Contributes to the Organization of Peripheral Myelinated Axons

Neurons are characterized by extremely long axons. This exceptional cell shape is likely to depend on multiple factors including interactions between the cytoskeleton and membrane proteins. In many cell types, members of the protein 4.1 family play an important role in tethering the cortical actin-s...

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Autores principales: Cifuentes-Diaz, Carmen, Chareyre, Fabrice, Garcia, Marta, Devaux, Jérôme, Carnaud, Michèle, Levasseur, Grégoire, Niwa-Kawakita, Michiko, Harroch, Sheila, Girault, Jean-Antoine, Giovannini, Marco, Goutebroze, Laurence
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3180372/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21966409
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025043
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author Cifuentes-Diaz, Carmen
Chareyre, Fabrice
Garcia, Marta
Devaux, Jérôme
Carnaud, Michèle
Levasseur, Grégoire
Niwa-Kawakita, Michiko
Harroch, Sheila
Girault, Jean-Antoine
Giovannini, Marco
Goutebroze, Laurence
author_facet Cifuentes-Diaz, Carmen
Chareyre, Fabrice
Garcia, Marta
Devaux, Jérôme
Carnaud, Michèle
Levasseur, Grégoire
Niwa-Kawakita, Michiko
Harroch, Sheila
Girault, Jean-Antoine
Giovannini, Marco
Goutebroze, Laurence
author_sort Cifuentes-Diaz, Carmen
collection PubMed
description Neurons are characterized by extremely long axons. This exceptional cell shape is likely to depend on multiple factors including interactions between the cytoskeleton and membrane proteins. In many cell types, members of the protein 4.1 family play an important role in tethering the cortical actin-spectrin cytoskeleton to the plasma membrane. Protein 4.1B is localized in myelinated axons, enriched in paranodal and juxtaparanodal regions, and also all along the internodes, but not at nodes of Ranvier where are localized the voltage-dependent sodium channels responsible for action potential propagation. To shed light on the role of protein 4.1B in the general organization of myelinated peripheral axons, we studied 4.1B knockout mice. These mice displayed a mildly impaired gait and motility. Whereas nodes were unaffected, the distribution of Caspr/paranodin, which anchors 4.1B to the membrane, was disorganized in paranodal regions and its levels were decreased. In juxtaparanodes, the enrichment of Caspr2, which also interacts with 4.1B, and of the associated TAG-1 and Kv1.1, was absent in mutant mice, whereas their levels were unaltered. Ultrastructural abnormalities were observed both at paranodes and juxtaparanodes. Axon calibers were slightly diminished in phrenic nerves and preterminal motor axons were dysmorphic in skeletal muscle. βII spectrin enrichment was decreased along the axolemma. Electrophysiological recordings at 3 post-natal weeks showed the occurrence of spontaneous and evoked repetitive activity indicating neuronal hyperexcitability, without change in conduction velocity. Thus, our results show that in myelinated axons 4.1B contributes to the stabilization of membrane proteins at paranodes, to the clustering of juxtaparanodal proteins, and to the regulation of the internodal axon caliber.
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spelling pubmed-31803722011-09-30 Protein 4.1B Contributes to the Organization of Peripheral Myelinated Axons Cifuentes-Diaz, Carmen Chareyre, Fabrice Garcia, Marta Devaux, Jérôme Carnaud, Michèle Levasseur, Grégoire Niwa-Kawakita, Michiko Harroch, Sheila Girault, Jean-Antoine Giovannini, Marco Goutebroze, Laurence PLoS One Research Article Neurons are characterized by extremely long axons. This exceptional cell shape is likely to depend on multiple factors including interactions between the cytoskeleton and membrane proteins. In many cell types, members of the protein 4.1 family play an important role in tethering the cortical actin-spectrin cytoskeleton to the plasma membrane. Protein 4.1B is localized in myelinated axons, enriched in paranodal and juxtaparanodal regions, and also all along the internodes, but not at nodes of Ranvier where are localized the voltage-dependent sodium channels responsible for action potential propagation. To shed light on the role of protein 4.1B in the general organization of myelinated peripheral axons, we studied 4.1B knockout mice. These mice displayed a mildly impaired gait and motility. Whereas nodes were unaffected, the distribution of Caspr/paranodin, which anchors 4.1B to the membrane, was disorganized in paranodal regions and its levels were decreased. In juxtaparanodes, the enrichment of Caspr2, which also interacts with 4.1B, and of the associated TAG-1 and Kv1.1, was absent in mutant mice, whereas their levels were unaltered. Ultrastructural abnormalities were observed both at paranodes and juxtaparanodes. Axon calibers were slightly diminished in phrenic nerves and preterminal motor axons were dysmorphic in skeletal muscle. βII spectrin enrichment was decreased along the axolemma. Electrophysiological recordings at 3 post-natal weeks showed the occurrence of spontaneous and evoked repetitive activity indicating neuronal hyperexcitability, without change in conduction velocity. Thus, our results show that in myelinated axons 4.1B contributes to the stabilization of membrane proteins at paranodes, to the clustering of juxtaparanodal proteins, and to the regulation of the internodal axon caliber. Public Library of Science 2011-09-26 /pmc/articles/PMC3180372/ /pubmed/21966409 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025043 Text en Cifuentes-Diaz et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cifuentes-Diaz, Carmen
Chareyre, Fabrice
Garcia, Marta
Devaux, Jérôme
Carnaud, Michèle
Levasseur, Grégoire
Niwa-Kawakita, Michiko
Harroch, Sheila
Girault, Jean-Antoine
Giovannini, Marco
Goutebroze, Laurence
Protein 4.1B Contributes to the Organization of Peripheral Myelinated Axons
title Protein 4.1B Contributes to the Organization of Peripheral Myelinated Axons
title_full Protein 4.1B Contributes to the Organization of Peripheral Myelinated Axons
title_fullStr Protein 4.1B Contributes to the Organization of Peripheral Myelinated Axons
title_full_unstemmed Protein 4.1B Contributes to the Organization of Peripheral Myelinated Axons
title_short Protein 4.1B Contributes to the Organization of Peripheral Myelinated Axons
title_sort protein 4.1b contributes to the organization of peripheral myelinated axons
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3180372/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21966409
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025043
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