PLoS Genetics (Dec 2015)

RAB-10 Regulates Dendritic Branching by Balancing Dendritic Transport.

  • Caitlin A Taylor,
  • Jing Yan,
  • Audrey S Howell,
  • Xintong Dong,
  • Kang Shen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1005695
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12
p. e1005695

Abstract

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The construction of a large dendritic arbor requires robust growth and the precise delivery of membrane and protein cargoes to specific subcellular regions of the developing dendrite. How the microtubule-based vesicular trafficking and sorting systems are regulated to distribute these dendritic development factors throughout the dendrite is not well understood. Here we identify the small GTPase RAB-10 and the exocyst complex as critical regulators of dendrite morphogenesis and patterning in the C. elegans sensory neuron PVD. In rab-10 mutants, PVD dendritic branches are reduced in the posterior region of the cell but are excessive in the distal anterior region of the cell. We also demonstrate that the dendritic branch distribution within PVD depends on the balance between the molecular motors kinesin-1/UNC-116 and dynein, and we propose that RAB-10 regulates dendrite morphology by balancing the activity of these motors to appropriately distribute branching factors, including the transmembrane receptor DMA-1.