PTEN Regulates Dendritic Arborization by Decreasing Microtubule Polymerization Rate

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Abstract

Phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) is a major negative regulator of the phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt/mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway. Loss-of-function mutations in PTEN have been found in a subset of patients with macrocephaly and autism spectrum disorder (ASD). PTEN loss in neurons leads to somal hypertrophy, aberrant migration, dendritic overgrowth, increased spine density, and hyperactivity of neuronal circuits. These neuronal overgrowth phenotypes are present on Pten knock-out (KO) and reconstitution with autism-associated point mutations. The mechanism underlying dendritic overgrowth in Pten deficient neurons is unclear. In this study, we examined how Pten loss impacts microtubule (MT) dynamics in both sexes using retroviral infection and transfection strategies to manipulate PTEN expression and tag the plus-end MT binding protein, end-binding protein 3 (EB3). We found Pten KO neurons sprout more new processes over time compared with wild-type (WT) neurons. We also found an increase in MT polymerization rate in Pten KO dendritic growth cones. Reducing MT polymerization rate to the WT level was sufficient to reduce dendritic overgrowth in Pten KO neurons in vitro and in vivo. Finally, we found that rescue of dendritic overgrowth via inhibition of MT polymerization was sufficient to improve the performance of Pten KO mice in a spatial memory task. Taken together, our data suggests that one factor underlying PTEN loss dependent dendritic overgrowth is increased MT polymerization. This opens the possibility for an intersectional approach targeting MT polymerization and mTOR with low doses of inhibitors to achieve therapeutic gains with minimal side effects in pathologies associated with loss of neuronal PTEN function.

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APA

Getz, S. A., Tariq, K., Marchand, D. H., Dickson, C. R., Howe, J. R., Skelton, P. D., … Luikart, B. W. (2022). PTEN Regulates Dendritic Arborization by Decreasing Microtubule Polymerization Rate. Journal of Neuroscience, 42(10), 1945–1957. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1835-21.2022

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