Control of Cortical Axon Elongation by a GABA-Driven Ca<sup>2+</sup>/Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase Cascade

Natsumi Ageta‐Ishihara(The University of Tokyo), Sayaka Takemoto‐Kimura(The University of Tokyo), Mio Nonaka(The University of Tokyo), Aki Adachi-Morishima(Nagoya University), Kanzo Suzuki(The University of Tokyo), Satoshi Kamijo(The University of Tokyo), Hajime Fujii(The University of Tokyo), Tatsuo Mano(The University of Tokyo), Frank Blaeser(University Hospital Leipzig), Talal A. Chatila(University of California, Los Angeles), Hidenobu Mizuno(Kyoto University), Tomoo Hirano(Kyoto University), Yoshiaki Tagawa(Kyoto University), Hiroyuki Okuno(Japan Science and Technology Agency), Haruhiko Bito(Japan Science and Technology Agency)
Journal of Neuroscience
October 28, 2009
Cited by 91Open Access
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Abstract

Ca(2+) signaling plays important roles during both axonal and dendritic growth. Yet whether and how Ca(2+) rises may trigger and contribute to the development of long-range cortical connections remains mostly unknown. Here, we demonstrate that two separate limbs of the Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase kinase (CaMKK)-CaMKI cascades, CaMKK-CaMKIalpha and CaMKK-CaMKIgamma, critically coordinate axonal and dendritic morphogenesis of cortical neurons, respectively. The axon-specific morphological phenotype required a diffuse cytoplasmic localization and a strikingly alpha-isoform-specific kinase activity of CaMKI. Unexpectedly, treatment with muscimol, a GABA(A) receptor agonist, selectively stimulated elongation of axons but not of dendrites, and the CaMKK-CaMKIalpha cascade critically mediated this axonogenic effect. Consistent with these findings, during early brain development, in vivo knockdown of CaMKIalpha significantly impaired the terminal axonal extension and thereby perturbed the refinement of the interhemispheric callosal projections into the contralateral cortices. Our findings thus indicate a novel role for the GABA-driven CaMKK-CaMKIalpha cascade as a mechanism critical for accurate cortical axon pathfinding, an essential process that may contribute to fine-tuning the formation of interhemispheric connectivity during the perinatal development of the CNS.


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