The development and physiology of neurons rely on their microtubule organization, which is characterized by plus-end-out oriented microtubules in the axon and a mix of plus-end-out and plus-end-in oriented microtubules in dendrites. This orientational pattern is established early in neuronal development and is tightly linked to axon-dendrite differentiation. Even though multiple potentially relevant mechanisms have been proposed, fundamental questions remain: How does the microtubule organization in neurons emerge, and how does a neuron develop a single axon and multiple dendrites? Here, we address these questions at two distinct, complementary levels: at a higher level by proposing a conceptual framework, in which we classify mechanisms into three categories based on how they contribute to the microtubule organization: orientational bias, parallel amplification, and polarization; at a lower level we build a biophysical model that incorporates multiple mechanisms of microtubule dynamics in a neuron, from which, using analytical calculations and simulations, we derive insights into the emergence of microtubule organization in developing neurons. We show that geometrical effects alone can confer a bias in microtubule orientation. Parallel amplification then enhances the resulting polarity. Coupling multiple neurites to a common cell body that serves as a shared reservoir of resources allows for a polarization mechanism that ensures that the microtubule organization of one neurite becomes axonal while all others are dendritic. This framework unifies diverse molecular observations and yields experimentally testable predictions about microtubule self-organization in early neuronal development.
Nicolaou, K., Mulder, B. M., Kapitein, L. C., Berger, F.
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