Rapid Cue-Specific Remodeling of the Nascent Axonal Proteome.
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IF: 18.688
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Cited by: 100
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Abstract

Axonal protein synthesis and degradation are rapidly regulated by extrinsic signals during neural wiring, but the full landscape of proteomic changes remains unknown due to limitations in axon sampling and sensitivity. By combining pulsed stable isotope labeling of amino acids in cell culture with single-pot solid-phase-enhanced sample preparation, we characterized the nascent proteome of isolated retinal axons on an unparalleled rapid timescale (5 min). Our analysis detects 350 basally translated axonal proteins on average, including several linked to neurological disease. Axons stimulated by different cues (Netrin-1, BDNF, Sema3A) show distinct signatures with more than 100 different nascent protein species up- or downregulated within the first 5 min followed by further dynamic remodeling. Switching repulsion to attraction triggers opposite regulation of a subset of common nascent proteins. Our findings thus reveal the rapid remodeling of the axonal proteomic landscape by extrinsic cues and uncover a logic underlying attraction versus repulsion.

Keywords

Omics
Gene Expression
PROCEDURE
axon
axon guidance
chemotropic response
extrinsic cues
growth cone
local protein synthesis
neural wiring
pSILAC-SP3
proteomics
retinal ganglion cell

MeSH terms

Animals
Axons
Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor
Cells, Cultured
Embryo, Nonmammalian
Gene Expression Regulation
Isotope Labeling
Mass Spectrometry
Netrin-1
Neuronal Outgrowth
Proteome
Proteomics
Retinal Ganglion Cells
Semaphorin-3A
Xenopus laevis

Authors

Cagnetta, Roberta
Frese, Christian K
Shigeoka, Toshiaki
Krijgsveld, Jeroen
Holt, Christine E

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