Emerging Roles of Filopodia and Dendritic Spines in Motoneuron Plasticity during Development and Disease

Motoneurons develop extensive dendritic trees for receiving excitatory and inhibitory synaptic inputs to perform a variety of complex motor tasks. At birth, the somatodendritic domains of mouse hypoglossal and lumbar motoneurons have dense filopodia and spines. Consistent with Vaughn’s synaptotropic...

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Main Authors: Refik Kanjhan, Peter G. Noakes, Mark C. Bellingham
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2016-01-01
Series:Neural Plasticity
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/3423267
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spelling doaj-1ceb063d6e4243cab8daac48551939ca2020-11-24T23:55:32ZengHindawi LimitedNeural Plasticity2090-59041687-54432016-01-01201610.1155/2016/34232673423267Emerging Roles of Filopodia and Dendritic Spines in Motoneuron Plasticity during Development and DiseaseRefik Kanjhan0Peter G. Noakes1Mark C. Bellingham2School of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4072, AustraliaSchool of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4072, AustraliaSchool of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4072, AustraliaMotoneurons develop extensive dendritic trees for receiving excitatory and inhibitory synaptic inputs to perform a variety of complex motor tasks. At birth, the somatodendritic domains of mouse hypoglossal and lumbar motoneurons have dense filopodia and spines. Consistent with Vaughn’s synaptotropic hypothesis, we propose a developmental unified-hybrid model implicating filopodia in motoneuron spinogenesis/synaptogenesis and dendritic growth and branching critical for circuit formation and synaptic plasticity at embryonic/prenatal/neonatal period. Filopodia density decreases and spine density initially increases until postnatal day 15 (P15) and then decreases by P30. Spine distribution shifts towards the distal dendrites, and spines become shorter (stubby), coinciding with decreases in frequency and increases in amplitude of excitatory postsynaptic currents with maturation. In transgenic mice, either overexpressing the mutated human Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase (hSOD1G93A) gene or deficient in GABAergic/glycinergic synaptic transmission (gephyrin, GAD-67, or VGAT gene knockout), hypoglossal motoneurons develop excitatory glutamatergic synaptic hyperactivity. Functional synaptic hyperactivity is associated with increased dendritic growth, branching, and increased spine and filopodia density, involving actin-based cytoskeletal and structural remodelling. Energy-dependent ionic pumps that maintain intracellular sodium/calcium homeostasis are chronically challenged by activity and selectively overwhelmed by hyperactivity which eventually causes sustained membrane depolarization leading to excitotoxicity, activating microglia to phagocytose degenerating neurons under neuropathological conditions.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/3423267
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Refik Kanjhan
Peter G. Noakes
Mark C. Bellingham
spellingShingle Refik Kanjhan
Peter G. Noakes
Mark C. Bellingham
Emerging Roles of Filopodia and Dendritic Spines in Motoneuron Plasticity during Development and Disease
Neural Plasticity
author_facet Refik Kanjhan
Peter G. Noakes
Mark C. Bellingham
author_sort Refik Kanjhan
title Emerging Roles of Filopodia and Dendritic Spines in Motoneuron Plasticity during Development and Disease
title_short Emerging Roles of Filopodia and Dendritic Spines in Motoneuron Plasticity during Development and Disease
title_full Emerging Roles of Filopodia and Dendritic Spines in Motoneuron Plasticity during Development and Disease
title_fullStr Emerging Roles of Filopodia and Dendritic Spines in Motoneuron Plasticity during Development and Disease
title_full_unstemmed Emerging Roles of Filopodia and Dendritic Spines in Motoneuron Plasticity during Development and Disease
title_sort emerging roles of filopodia and dendritic spines in motoneuron plasticity during development and disease
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Neural Plasticity
issn 2090-5904
1687-5443
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Motoneurons develop extensive dendritic trees for receiving excitatory and inhibitory synaptic inputs to perform a variety of complex motor tasks. At birth, the somatodendritic domains of mouse hypoglossal and lumbar motoneurons have dense filopodia and spines. Consistent with Vaughn’s synaptotropic hypothesis, we propose a developmental unified-hybrid model implicating filopodia in motoneuron spinogenesis/synaptogenesis and dendritic growth and branching critical for circuit formation and synaptic plasticity at embryonic/prenatal/neonatal period. Filopodia density decreases and spine density initially increases until postnatal day 15 (P15) and then decreases by P30. Spine distribution shifts towards the distal dendrites, and spines become shorter (stubby), coinciding with decreases in frequency and increases in amplitude of excitatory postsynaptic currents with maturation. In transgenic mice, either overexpressing the mutated human Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase (hSOD1G93A) gene or deficient in GABAergic/glycinergic synaptic transmission (gephyrin, GAD-67, or VGAT gene knockout), hypoglossal motoneurons develop excitatory glutamatergic synaptic hyperactivity. Functional synaptic hyperactivity is associated with increased dendritic growth, branching, and increased spine and filopodia density, involving actin-based cytoskeletal and structural remodelling. Energy-dependent ionic pumps that maintain intracellular sodium/calcium homeostasis are chronically challenged by activity and selectively overwhelmed by hyperactivity which eventually causes sustained membrane depolarization leading to excitotoxicity, activating microglia to phagocytose degenerating neurons under neuropathological conditions.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/3423267
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