Polyglutamylation of microtubules drives neuronal remodeling

25 juin 2025Nature Communications

DOI : 10.1038/s41467-025-60855-6

Auteurs

Antoneta Gavoci, Anxhela Zhiti, Michaela Rusková, Maria M. Magiera, Mengzhe Wang, Karin A. Ziegler, Torben J. Hausrat, Anselm I. Ugwuja, Shreyangi Chakraborty, Stefan Engelhardt, Matthias Kneussel, Martin Balastik, Carsten Janke, Thomas Misgeld, Monika S. Brill

Résumé

Abstract

Developmental remodeling shapes neural circuits via activity-dependent pruning of synapses and axons. Regulation of the cytoskeleton is critical for this process, as microtubule loss via enzymatic severing is an early step of pruning across many circuits and species. However, how microtubule-severing enzymes, such as spastin, are activated in specific neuronal compartments remains unknown. Here, we reveal that polyglutamylation, a post-translational tubulin modification enriched in neurons, plays an instructive role in developmental remodeling by tagging microtubules for severing. Motor neuron-specific gene deletion of enzymes that add or remove tubulin polyglutamylation—TTLL glutamylases vs. CCP deglutamylases—accelerates or delays neuromuscular synapse remodeling in a neurotransmission-dependent manner. This mechanism is not specific to peripheral synapses but also operates in central circuits, e.g., the hippocampus. Thus, tubulin polyglutamylation acts as a cytoskeletal rheostat of remodeling that shapes neuronal morphology and connectivity.

Membres

MAGDA MAGIERA

Chargé de recherche CNRS

CARSTEN JANKE

Directeur de recherche CNRS