Glycerophospholipid regulation of modality-specific sensory axon guidance in the spinal cord

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Abstract

Glycerophospholipids, the structural components of cell membranes, have not been considered to be spatial cues for intercellular signaling because of their ubiquitous distribution. We identified lyso-phosphatidyl-b-D-glucoside (LysoPtdGlc), a hydrophilic glycerophospholipid, and demonstrated its role in modality-specific repulsive guidance of spinal cord sensory axons. LysoPtdGlc is locally synthesized and released by radial glia in a patterned spatial distribution to regulate the targeting of nociceptive but not proprioceptive central axon projections. Library screening identified the G protein-coupled receptor GPR55 as a high-affinity receptor for LysoPtdGlc, and GPR55 deletion or LysoPtdGlc loss of function in vivo caused the misallocation of nociceptive axons into proprioceptive zones. These findings show that LysoPtdGlc/GPR55 is a lipid-based signaling system in glia-neuron communication for neural development.

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Guy, A. T., Nagatsuka, Y., Ooashi, N., Inoue, M., Nakata, A., Greimel, P., … Kamiguchi, H. (2015). Glycerophospholipid regulation of modality-specific sensory axon guidance in the spinal cord. Science, 349(6251), 974–977. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aab3516

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