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Drebrin controls neuronal migration through the formation and alignment of the leading process

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posted on 2025-07-30, 22:16 authored by Xin-peng Dun, Tiago Bandeira de Lima, James Allen, Sara Geraldo, Phillip Gordon-Weeks, John K. Chilton
Formation of a functional nervous system requires neurons to migrate to the correct place within the developing brain. Tangentially migrating neurons are guided by a leading process which extends towards the target and is followed by the cell body. How environmental cues are coupled to specific cytoskeletal changes to produce and guide leading process growth is unknown. One such cytoskeletal modulator is drebrin, an actin-binding protein known to induce protrusions in many cell types and be important for regulating neuronal morphology. Using the migration of oculomotor neurons as a model, we have shown that drebrin is necessary for the generation and guidance of the leading process. In the absence of drebrin, leading processes are not formed and cells fail to migrate although axon growth and pathfinding appear grossly unaffected. Conversely, when levels of drebrin are elevated the leading processes turn away from their target and as a result the motor neuron cell bodies move along abnormal paths within the brain. The aberrant trajectories were highly reproducible suggesting that drebrin is required to interpret specific guidance cues. The axons and growth cones of these neurons display morphological changes, particularly increased branching and filopodial number but despite this they extend along normal developmental pathways. Collectively these results show that drebrin is initially necessary for the formation of a leading process and subsequently for this to respond to navigational signals and grow in the correct direction. Furthermore, we have shown that the actions of drebrin can be segregated within individual motor neurons to direct their migration independently of axon guidance.

Funding

Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia, Portugal

J.C. and X-P.D. were supported by a Wellcome Trust project grant, J.A. by the South West Regional Development Agency, S.G. by Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia, Portugal and P.G-W. by the Medical Research Council

Medical Research Council

South West Regional Development Agency

Wellcome Trust

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notes: PMCID: PMC3356577 Paid Open Access Article Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc

Journal

Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

United States

Language

en

Citation

Vol. 49, Issue 3, pp. 341 - 350

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