eLife (Jul 2021)

An autoinhibitory clamp of actin assembly constrains and directs synaptic endocytosis

  • Steven J Del Signore,
  • Charlotte F Kelley,
  • Emily M Messelaar,
  • Tania Lemos,
  • Michelle F Marchan,
  • Biljana Ermanoska,
  • Markus Mund,
  • Thomas G Fai,
  • Marko Kaksonen,
  • Avital Adah Rodal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.69597
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Synaptic membrane-remodeling events such as endocytosis require force-generating actin assembly. The endocytic machinery that regulates these actin and membrane dynamics localizes at high concentrations to large areas of the presynaptic membrane, but actin assembly and productive endocytosis are far more restricted in space and time. Here we describe a mechanism whereby autoinhibition clamps the presynaptic endocytic machinery to limit actin assembly to discrete functional events. We found that collective interactions between the Drosophila endocytic proteins Nwk/FCHSD2, Dap160/intersectin, and WASp relieve Nwk autoinhibition and promote robust membrane-coupled actin assembly in vitro. Using automated particle tracking to quantify synaptic actin dynamics in vivo, we discovered that Nwk-Dap160 interactions constrain spurious assembly of WASp-dependent actin structures. These interactions also promote synaptic endocytosis, suggesting that autoinhibition both clamps and primes the synaptic endocytic machinery, thereby constraining actin assembly to drive productive membrane remodeling in response to physiological cues.

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