Neurofilaments and Neurofilament Proteins in Health and Disease

Aidong Yuan(New York University), Mala V. Rao(New York University), Veeranna(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Ralph A. Nixon(New York University)
Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology
April 1, 2017
Cited by 726Open Access
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Abstract

Neurofilaments (NFs) are unique among tissue-specific classes of intermediate filaments (IFs) in being heteropolymers composed of four subunits (NF-L [neurofilament light]; NF-M [neurofilament middle]; NF-H [neurofilament heavy]; and a-internexin or peripherin), each having different domain structures and functions. Here, we review how NFs provide structural support for the highly asymmetric geometries of neurons and, especially, for the marked radial expansion of myelinated axons crucial for effective nerve conduction velocity. NFs in axons extensively cross-bridge and interconnect with other non-IF components of the cytoskeleton, including microtubules, actin filaments, and other fibrous cytoskeletal elements, to establish a regionally specialized network that undergoes exceptionally slow local turnover and serves as a docking platform to organize other organelles and proteins. We also discuss how a small pool of oligomeric and short filamentous precursors in the slow phase of axonal transport maintains this network. A complex pattern of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation events on each subunit modulates filament assembly, turnover, and organization within the axonal cytoskeleton. Multiple factors, and especially turnover rate, determine the size of the network, which can vary substantially along the axon. NF gene mutations cause several neuroaxonal disorders characterized by disrupted subunit assembly and NFaggregation. Additional NFalterations are associated with varied neuropsychiatric disorders. New evidence that subunits of NFs exist within postsynaptic terminal boutons and influence neurotransmission suggests how NF proteins might contribute to normal synaptic function and neuropsychiatric disease states. Outline 1 Introduction 2 Subunit composition of NFs 3 NF protein domain structure and assembly 4 NF protein expression 5 Posttranslational modifications of NF proteins 6 NF protein degradation 7 Axonal transport of NF proteins 8 Functions of NF proteins 9 NF subunit-interacting organelles and proteins 10 NF proteins in disease states 11 NF proteins as potential markers of disease and injury 12 NF biology-The next decade


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