Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience (Sep 2021)

The Curious Anti-Pathology of the Wlds Mutation: Paradoxical Postsynaptic Spine Growth Accompanies Delayed Presynaptic Wallerian Degeneration

  • Oswald Steward,
  • Oswald Steward,
  • Oswald Steward,
  • Oswald Steward,
  • Oswald Steward,
  • Jennifer M. Yonan,
  • Jennifer M. Yonan,
  • Paula M. Falk

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnmol.2021.735919
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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The Wlds mutation, which arose spontaneously in C57Bl/6 mice, remarkably delays the onset of Wallerian degeneration of axons. This remarkable phenotype has transformed our understanding of mechanisms contributing to survival vs. degeneration of mammalian axons after separation from their cell bodies. Although there are numerous studies of how the Wlds mutation affects axon degeneration, especially in the peripheral nervous system, less is known about how the mutation affects degeneration of CNS synapses. Here, using electron microscopy, we explore how the Wlds mutation affects synaptic terminal degeneration and withering and re-growth of dendritic spines on dentate granule cells following lesions of perforant path inputs from the entorhinal cortex. Our results reveal that substantial delays in the timing of synapse degeneration in Wlds mice are accompanied by paradoxical hypertrophy of spine heads with enlargement of post-synaptic membrane specializations (PSDs) and development of spinules. These increases in the complexity of spine morphology are similar to what is seen following induction of long-term potentiation (LTP). Robust and paradoxical spine growth suggests yet to be characterized signaling processes between amputated but non-degenerating axons and their postsynaptic targets.

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