|
|
|
|||
| Home Help Feedback Subscriptions Archive Search Table of Contents | ||||
First published online March 6, 2009
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/dev.014423
Review |

1 Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, Columbia University Medical Center, 630
W. 168th St., P&S 12-403, New York, NY 10032, USA.
2 Department of Neuroscience, Columbia University Medical Center, 630 W. 168th
St., P&S 12-403, New York, NY 10032, USA.
3 Department of Physiology and Cellular Biophysics, Columbia University Medical
Center, 630 W. 168th St., P&S 12-403, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Author for correspondence (e-mail:
wg2135{at}columbia.edu)
SUMMARY
Neurons are one of the most morphologically diverse cell types, in large part owing to their intricate dendrite branching patterns. Dendrites are structures that are specialized to receive and process inputs in neurons, thus their specific morphologies reflect neural connectivity and influence information flow through circuits. Recent studies in Drosophila on the molecular basis of dendrite diversity, dendritic guidance, the cell biology of dendritic branch patterning and territory formation have identified numerous intrinsic and extrinsic cues that shape diverse features of dendrites. As we discuss in this review, many of the mechanisms that are being elucidated show conservation in diverse systems.
Introduction
Dendrites - processes of neurons that are primarily specialized for
information input - are one of nature's remarkable architectural feats, and
the diverse growth patterns shown by dendritic arbors raise important
developmental questions. The particular shapes of dendrites are important in
neuronal function and circuit assembly. Their targets and complexity influence
the range of inputs that a neuron receives. In addition, the morphology of a
dendritic arbor can impact the processing and integration of electrical
signals (London and Häusser,
2005
). Studies of dendrite morphogenesis therefore seek to
understand the developmental origin of arbor shape and to shed light on the
significance of particular morphologies for nervous system connectivity and
function.
Dendrite morphogenesis consists of a series of interrelated steps, which
include outgrowth and branching, guidance and targeting, cessation of growth
and, in some cases, arbor remodeling (see
Box 1). Each process is under
extensive genetic regulation and has been the subject of intensive study in
recent years. In this review, we highlight recent advances in understanding
the molecules and mechanisms that function during these key stages of dendrite
morphogenesis. We focus primarily on studies carried out in
Drosophila (Fig. 1)
and refer to known or emerging areas of conservation in vertebrate systems
where appropriate. We focus on several key questions, including: what are the
cell biological mechanisms that specify the distribution of dendritic branches
along an arbor? How do dendrites achieve type-specific branching patterns? How
is specific dendritic targeting controlled in different neurons? How are
dendrites instructed when to stop branching and growing? How does activity
impact dendrite development in Drosophila? We refer readers to other
reviews that cover topics that have thus far been studied primarily in
vertebrate systems, including dendritic spine morphogenesis and
activity-dependent dendrite growth (Alvarez
and Sabatini, 2007
; Chen and
Ghosh, 2005
; Flavell and
Greenberg, 2008
; Lippman and
Dunaevsky, 2005
; Redmond,
2008
).
Genetic insights into the cell biology of dendrite growth and branching
The growth and specialized functions of dendritic arbors can require large
investments of dendritic plasma membrane and proteins during development, and,
indeed, the polarized trafficking of cargoes to dendritic branches and the
incorporation of new membrane are fundamental processes for proper arbor
branching and expansion. Isolated Golgi compartments, termed Golgi outposts,
are a component of the secretory pathway found in dendrites of some vertebrate
and invertebrate neurons, indicating that local secretory trafficking occurs
in dendrites and is a conserved process
(Fig. 2)
(Horton and Ehlers, 2003
;
Horton et al., 2005
;
Ye et al., 2007
). In cultured
rat hippocampal neurons, Golgi outposts are found in longer and more highly
branched dendrites, and manipulations that disrupt Golgi trafficking
[including Golgi disassembly, blocking endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-to-Golgi
trafficking, or blocking cargo budding from the trans-Golgi network] lead to
defects in dendritic growth and maintenance
(Horton et al., 2005
). The
dependence of dendrite growth on Golgi outposts is also conserved in
Drosophila. A forward genetic screen for mutations that affect
dendrite and axon morphology using Drosophila class IV dendritic
arborization (da) neurons (see Glossary,
Box 2), recovered mutations in
several genes that encode proteins involved in ER-to-Golgi transport,
including sar1, sec23 and Rab1
(Ye et al., 2007
). Sar1 is
required to initiate vesicle formation for trafficking from the ER to Golgi,
and clones mutant for sar1 show reduced dendrite growth and diffuse
Golgi outposts (Fig. 2C)
(Ye et al., 2007
). Axons are
not as strongly affected in these mutants and show only a reduction in small
terminal fibers (Ye et al.,
2007
). Likewise, rat hippocampal neurons transfected with Sar1
siRNA show strongly reduced dendritic length but normal axon growth
(Ye et al., 2007
), indicating
that these distinct cell types utilize evolutionarily conserved mechanisms of
dendritic secretory trafficking.
| Box 1. Hotspots of dendrite death
The dendrites and axons of insect neurons can undergo dramatic remodeling
during the metamorphic transition from larva to adult to match the stark
behavioral differences between these stages. Some dendritic trees and axons
are pruned under the control of the steroid hormone ecdysone, acting through
the B1 isoform of the Ecdysone receptor (EcR), as well as by matrix
metalloproteases and the ubiquitin-proteasome system
(Kuo et al., 2005
|
One of the important findings of these studies is that Golgi outposts are
selectively enriched in dendrites and are primarily involved in dendrite, but
not axon, growth. This result provided insight into the important problem of
how polarized dendritic and axonal growth is maintained, but raised the
question of how Golgi and other specific cargoes are trafficked to the
dendritic compartment. Expression of a dominant-negative version of Lava lamp,
a protein that mediates interactions between the Golgi and the dynein complex,
caused a redistribution of Golgi outposts and a correlated shift in branches
toward the proximal part of the dendritic arbor
(Ye et al., 2007
).
Subsequently, two independent genetic screens for genes that regulate class IV
da neuron morphology each found that mutations in the dynein light
intermediate chain (Dlic2) also cause a proximal shift in the
distribution of branch points (Satoh et
al., 2008
; Zheng et al.,
2008
) (Fig. 2D), as
well as of Golgi outposts (Zheng et al.,
2008
). The multi-subunit dynein complex, of which Dlic2 is a
member, is a minus end-directed microtubule motor, and previous studies of
Drosophila mushroom body neurons have indicated roles for Lis-1 (a
protein that interacts with the dynein complex) and the dynein complex
components Dynein heavy chain and Dynein light chain in dendritic elaboration
(Liu et al., 2000
;
Reuter et al., 2003
). The
majority of dendritic microtubules in several major classes of
Drosophila neurons, including da sensory neurons, appear to be
oriented in a minus end-distal arrangement with axonal microtubules oriented
oppositely (Rolls et al.,
2007
; Stone et al.,
2008
; Zheng et al.,
2008
), suggesting a model in which dynein functions during
dendrite morphogenesis to traffic branching machinery to growing dendritic
arbors.
|
|
Dendritic arbors show tremendous morphological diversity, with specific shapes influencing the inputs that a neuron receives and impacting the processing of signals within the arbor. The identification of the developmental programs that endow different neurons with distinct shapes is therefore an important goal. Much work has been focused on how intrinsic transcriptional programs of dendritic growth and branching control characteristic cell-type-specific morphogenesis, much of it carried out in the Drosophila peripheral nervous system (PNS).
The embryonic and larval PNS consists of a well-defined array of sensory
neurons in each hemisegment. Some PNS neurons have a single dendrite (external
sensory neurons and chordotonal neurons), and some have more extensively
branched arbors (the multidendritic neurons). The da neurons are one subset of
multidendritic neurons that show diverse dendritic morphologies
(Grueber et al., 2002
;
Sweeney et al., 2002
), and
they are categorized into four classes (I-IV) based on increasing arbor
complexity (Grueber et al.,
2002
) (Fig. 3).
Thus, variations in PNS dendrite morphology range from the general (single
dendrite versus multiple dendrite) to the specific (different subtypes of
multidendritic morphologies). The distinction between a single dendrite
morphology of external sensory neurons and a multiple dendrite morphology is
specified by the zinc-finger transcription factor Hamlet. The hamlet
gene is expressed in the immediate precursors of external sensory neurons (and
briefly in postmitotic external sensory neurons), where it acts to repress
dendritic branching. Lack of hamlet expression in the immediate
precursors of multidendritic neurons permits these neurons to form highly
branched arborizations (Moore et al.,
2002
).
Genetic screens, as well as studies of genes expressed in all, or specific
subsets of, da neurons have identified transcription factors that function to
further diversify dendritic branching morphology. The Broad/Tramtrack/Bric a
brac (BTB) zinc-finger transcription factor Abrupt is expressed in the simple
class I neurons (Fig. 3A) and
is required to limit dendritic branching
(Li et al., 2004
;
Sugimura et al., 2004
). The
expression of Abrupt in the other, more complex classes strongly suppresses
dendritic complexity (Li et al.,
2004
; Sugimura et al.,
2004
). The transcriptional mechanisms that underlie dendrite
simplification by Abrupt remain unknown. Abrupt and the homeodomain protein
Cut are expressed in complementary cell classes
(Grueber et al., 2003a
;
Li et al., 2004
;
Sugimura et al., 2004
), and
although ectopic expression of Cut can reduce Abrupt levels in class I
neurons, there is no strong evidence that cross-regulation is responsible for
their exclusive expression patterns
(Sugimura et al., 2004
).
Whereas Cut is undetectable in class I neurons, it shows progressively
increasing levels in class II, IV and III neurons
(Blochlinger et al., 1990
;
Grueber et al., 2003a
)
(Fig. 3B-D). Loss of Cut from
cells that express it leads to a simplification of dendrites, whereas its
misexpression leads to morphological switches towards the dendritic pattern of
the higher-level neurons (Grueber et al.,
2003a
). Although Cut acts to increase branching in most classes of
da neurons when overexpressed, the highest levels of Cut do not correlate with
the greatest number of branches, but rather with the presence of numerous
actin-based filopodia-like extensions. One possibility is that Cut levels are
more closely associated with branch dynamics
(Grueber et al., 2003a
;
Sugimura et al., 2003
) and in
this way influence the ability of neurons to build more complex scaffolds. The
factors that specify or maintain Abrupt and Cut levels in different classes,
the transcriptional targets of these transcription factors, and whether the
level of Cut affects targets qualitatively or quantitatively, are among the
key questions that remain to be addressed.
| Box 2. Glossary of terms Amacrine cells A morphologically diverse class of interneurons in the vertebrate retina that synapse with RGC dendrites. Self-avoidance and tiling of amacrine cell neurites ensure even and complete coverage of the retina. Antennal lobe The first relay of the insect olfactory system in the brain consisting of axons of olfactory receptor neurons, dendrites of projection neurons, processes of local interneurons, and glia. Analogous to the mammalian olfactory bulb. Antennal lobe glomeruli
Discrete regions of the antennal lobe where axons of olfactory receptor
neurons synapse with the dendrites of projection neurons and local
interneurons. There are Cortical pyramidal neurons The main type of excitatory neuron in the vertebrate cerebral cortex. Basic pyramidal neuron dendritic morphology is polarized with a single apical dendrite, which branches into an apical tuft, and numerous basal dendrites. Dendritic arborization (da) neurons Insect sensory neurons in the peripheral nervous system that spread multiple branched dendrites across the body wall. Also called md-da neurons, Drosophila da neurons are subdivided into classes I-IV in order of increasing branching complexity. Inner plexiform layer (IPL) A layer within the vertebrate retina containing axons and dendrites of several retinal neuron subtypes. Many of these cells, such as RGCs and amacrine cells, demonstrate a tiled arrangement across the retina. Olfactory projection neuron (PN) Second-order neuron of the insect olfactory system that sends dendrites to discrete glomeruli where they receive inputs from olfactory receptor neurons. Axons project to higher brain centers. Retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) A morphologically diverse class of vertebrate retinal neurons that elaborate dendrites in the IPL and project axons through the optic nerve to carry visual information to the brain. Many types of RGCs have a tiled arrangement to ensure even coverage of the retina. Self-avoidance The process by which branches from the same neuron recognize and repel each other, leading to branch separation and/or even spreading across a territory. Tiling Complete but non-overlapping coverage of a receptive area by arbors of a functionally related group of neurons.
|
Recent studies of the Collier/Olfactory-1/Early B-cell factor (COE)
transcription factor Knot (Collier) suggest that dendritic arbor patterns are
specified in individual cells by combinatorial use of transcription factors.
Knot is expressed, together with Cut, in class IV neurons
(Fig. 3D) and is required for
the development of their highly branched class-specific arborization.
Postmitotic misexpression of Knot in other da neuron classes is likewise
sufficient to transform them towards a class IV-like branching pattern
(Crozatier and Vincent, 2008
;
Hattori, Y. et al., 2007
;
Jinushi-Nakao et al., 2007
).
Although Cut can exert a moderate positive effect on the amplitude of Knot
expression (Jinushi-Nakao et al.,
2007
), the consequences of such regulation for arbor morphology
are not clear. Conversely, Knot activity counteracts the formation of the
class III-like actin-based dendritic extensions that are induced by Cut
(Jinushi-Nakao et al., 2007
).
These results suggest that a code for the two most complex morphologies -
Cuthi/Knot- (class III) and
Cutintermediate/Knot+ (class IV) - promotes several of
the differences in their class-specific dendritic branching patterns. One
possibility supported by overexpression experiments is that Cut promotes
F-actin-based dendrite extensions, whereas Knot promotes the growth of a
microtubule-based arbor (Jinushi-Nakao et
al., 2007
). Knot might also regulate physiological features of
class IV neurons given that it also regulates the expression of an ion channel
subunit encoded by pickpocket (and transgenic reporters of
pickpocket expression) in these cells
(Ainsley et al., 2003
;
Crozatier and Vincent, 2008
;
Hattori, Y. et al., 2007
;
Jinushi-Nakao et al.,
2007
).
Knot regulates branching, at least in part, by positively regulating the
expression of Spastin (Jinushi-Nakao et
al., 2007
), an ATPase that has microtubule-severing activity
(Roll-Mecak and Vale, 2005
).
At appropriate levels, Spastin severing activity might promote complex
dendritic branching by creating opportunities for new microtubule
polymerization (Jinushi-Nakao et al.,
2007
). The overexpression of mammalian homologs of either Cut or
Knot can at least partially mimic the effect of its Drosophila
counterpart (Grueber et al.,
2003a
; Jinushi-Nakao et al.,
2007
). The rodent homologs of Cut and Knot (the Cux and Ebf
transcription factors, respectively) are expressed in the developing brain
(Cobos et al., 2006
;
Garel et al., 1997
;
Nieto et al., 2004
;
Wang et al., 1997
), but
whether they have conserved roles in dendrite morphogenesis is not yet
known.
Spineless, a conserved basic helix-loop-helix Period/Ahr/Single-minded
(bHLH-PAS) transcription factor, has a unique influence on dendrite
diversification. When da neurons are mutant for spineless, all four
da neuron classes exhibit similar morphologies that are of intermediate
branching complexity (Kim et al.,
2006
). However, most da neurons (with the exception of class IV
neurons) do not show an overexpression phenotype
(Kim et al., 2006
). Thus, in
different cells, Spineless acts to either limit or promote branching, perhaps
permitting the diversification of a common (maybe a ground or default state)
dendritic morphology of intermediate complexity
(Kim et al., 2006
). How
Spineless might accomplish this is not clear. Given that Spineless does not
seem to control the expression of Cut or Abrupt in da neurons
(Kim et al., 2006
), and that
both Cut and Abrupt are sufficient to drive class-specific branching when
overexpressed in Spineless-expressing neurons, it is conceivable that
Spineless might normally regulate factors that counteract the execution of
class-specific programs. Additionally, the molecular mechanism by which
Spineless acts is not known, given that its typical heterodimeric partner,
Tango (Emmons et al., 1999
),
is not required cell-autonomously during dendrite morphogenesis
(Kim et al., 2006
).
|
Control of dendritic guidance and targeting
The development of dendritic branch diversity is aided by
cell-type-specific dendritic targeting. Dendritic guidance and targeting
programs polarize arbors to innervate particular regions of the nervous system
out of many possible targets, and thus have the potential to impact the inputs
that a neuron receives and its function in specific circuits. Studies in
vertebrate and invertebrate systems indicate that a first level of targeting
control arises from intrinsic programs that are linked to cell lineage and
identity (Jefferis et al.,
2001
; Kelsch et al.,
2007
; Komiyama et al.,
2003
; Komiyama and Luo,
2007
). These programs, in turn, are likely to dictate how
dendrites respond to attractive or repulsive cues in their environment. In
addition, local interactions between dendrites (see below) help to define and
refine dendritic target boundaries. Thus, a focus of current research is to
identify and characterize the transcription factors and guidance signals that
control precise dendritic targeting.
Transcriptional regulation of dendritic targeting in the antennal lobe
An extensive analysis of the intrinsic factors that control dendritic
targeting has been undertaken in the Drosophila antennal lobe (AL)
(see Glossary, Box 2), where
olfactory information from olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) is transmitted to
second-order olfactory neurons termed projection neurons (PNs) (see Glossary,
Box 2)
(Fig. 4A). About 150-200 PNs
are produced from three major lineages: the anterodorsal (adPN), lateral (lPN)
and ventral (vPN) lineages. PN dendrites target one, or a few, out of
50
AL glomeruli (see Glossary, Box
2) in a lineage and, at least in the case of the adPNs, in a birth
order-dependent manner (Fig.
4A) (Jefferis et al.,
2001
). Within the adPN lineage, PN temporal identity is partly
controlled by the action of the BTB zinc-finger protein Chronologically
inappropriate morphogenesis (Chinmo), which is required in early-born adPNs
for correct axon and dendrite targeting and acts to prevent the adoption of
cell fates typical of later-born neurons
(Zhu, S. et al., 2006
).
Although intrinsic programs (as discussed below) are important for PN
targeting, and although the early glomerular map forms before the AL is
innervated by ORN axons (Jefferis et al.,
2004
), dendrites also engage in complex interactions with axons
and other dendrites as they become restricted to specific glomeruli
(Zhu, H. et al., 2006
;
Zhu and Luo, 2004
). For
example, disrupting PN dendrite targeting (through manipulation of
Dscam expression) can cause shifts in ORN axon innervation patterns
(Zhu, H. et al., 2006
), and,
conversely, shifting ORN axon terminals at later developmental stages (through
manipulation of Sema-1a signaling) results in altered PN dendritic projections
(Lattemann et al., 2007
).
Thus, although dendritic targeting is prespecified, the final arrangements of
dendrites is likely also to arise from an interplay between pre- and
postsynaptic partners (Jefferis,
2006
; Luo and Flanagan,
2007
), which provide an additional, localized level of control
over targeting specificity.
Intrinsic transcriptional programs control lineage-specific targeting of PN
dendrites by directing their global and local positioning in the AL. Based on
the analysis of several families of transcription factors (including
POU-domain, homeodomain, BTB zinc-finger and LIM-homeodomain families), it has
been shown that some transcription factors, such as Cut, are likely to specify
the general AL domain that is targeted by PN dendrites
(Komiyama and Luo, 2007
).
Other transcription factors, including the POU-domain proteins Acj6 and
Drifter (Ventral veins lacking - FlyBase), are expressed in a lineage-specific
manner (Acj6 in adPNs and Drifter in lPNs) and specify which local AL
glomeruli (see Glossary, Box 2)
are targeted by dendrites (Komiyama et
al., 2003
; Komiyama and Luo,
2007
). An example of how global and local transcriptional programs
act together to mediate lineage-specific dendrite targeting is provided by
studies of the innervation of the DL1 glomerulus by DL1 adPNs
(Komiyama and Luo, 2007
). DL1
dendritic targeting by adPNs depends on Acj6, and in acj6 mutant
clones dendrites are no longer restricted to glomerular boundaries
(Komiyama et al., 2003
;
Komiyama and Luo, 2007
)
(Fig. 4B,C). The misexpression
of Cut in acj6 mutant clones shifts dendrites to distant glomeruli in
the medial portion of the AL, but these glomeruli are ones that are normally
targeted by adPNs, indicating that some lineage information is preserved
(Komiyama and Luo, 2007
)
(Fig. 4C). By contrast, if Cut
is misexpressed in acj6 clones together with the lPN-specific
transcription factor Drifter, the medial glomeruli that are targeted are
mostly lPN targets (Komiyama and Luo,
2007
) (Fig. 4C).
Thus, lineage-specific PN targeting can arise from coarse and local
instructions provided by combinations of transcription factors.
|
With the identification of transcription factors that control dendritic
targeting, an important question that arises is how these factors are linked
to the expression of specific guidance receptors, cell adhesion molecules or
components of receptor signaling pathways that affect targeting choices (some
of these signals are reviewed below). Links between transcription factor
activity and the expression of specific axon guidance factors have been
identified in several systems (Kania and
Jessell, 2003
; Labrador et
al., 2005
; Lee et al.,
2008
; Zlatic et al.,
2003
), but so far such relationships have not been established for
dendritic targeting.
|
The targeting of dendrites can occur via several strategies, including
exuberant growth followed by selective branch stabilization, spatially
restricted outgrowth at targets, and guidance of arbors with respect to major
landmarks (Furrer et al.,
2003
; Morgan et al.,
2006
; Mumm et al.,
2006
; Ou et al.,
2008
; Wong and Ghosh,
2002
). Studies of stereotyped axon guidance decisions have
identified core cues and receptors (Garbe
and Bashaw, 2004
; Huber et
al., 2003
), and data so far indicate that in both vertebrate and
invertebrate systems, several of these same families of molecules also
function in the guidance and targeting of dendrites, including Semaphorins
(Komiyama et al., 2007
;
Polleux et al., 2000
), Robo
and Slit (Furrer et al., 2003
;
Furrer et al., 2007
;
Godenschwege et al., 2002
;
Ou et al., 2008
;
Whitford et al., 2002
) and
Netrin and DCC/Frazzled/UNC-40 (Furrer et
al., 2003
; Ou et al.,
2008
; Suli et al.,
2006
).
Dendritic targeting by Semaphorins
The Semaphorins are a large family of secreted and membrane-bound proteins
that mediate both attractive and repulsive guidance in axons primarily via
Neuropilins and the Plexin family of transmembrane receptors
(Huber et al., 2003
). Roles
for Semaphorins in dendritic morphogenesis were initially characterized in
vertebrate systems, in which the secreted Semaphorin, Sema3A, acts through
neuropilin 1 to orient apical dendrites of cortical pyramidal neurons (see
Glossary, Box 2) towards the
pial surface of the cortex (Polleux et
al., 2000
). A recent study that investigated the cues that mediate
early dendritic targeting to domains of the Drosophila AL identified
an important role for the transmembrane Semaphorin, Sema-1a
(Komiyama et al., 2007
).
Sema-1a is present at graded levels across multiple PN dendrites, with the
concentration increasing along one specific axis of the AL: the
ventromedial-to-dorsolateral axis (Fig.
5). Gain-of-function and loss-of-function manipulations have
demonstrated that Sema-1a levels specify initial targeting of PN dendrites,
with increasing or decreasing levels of Sema-1a specifying more dorsolateral
or ventromedial positions, respectively
(Komiyama et al., 2007
)
(Fig. 5). It is not known how
Sema-1a levels are specified in different PNs. Sema-1a function is
cell-autonomous, indicating that it does not act as a ligand, but rather acts
as a receptor for an as yet unknown ligand in this system
(Komiyama et al., 2007
). The
coarse positional information provided by Sema-1a is presumably refined by
subsequent dendrite-dendrite and axon-dendrite interactions
(Komiyama et al., 2007
;
Zhu, H. et al., 2006
;
Zhu and Luo, 2004
). These
findings provide an intriguing example of a graded signal (in this case
Sema-1a) that contributes to the development of a discrete sensory map
(Komiyama et al., 2007
;
Luo and Flanagan, 2007
).
Interestingly, Sema-1a is multifunctional during AL development. Unlike in PN
dendrites, which use Sema-1a as a cell-autonomous receptor, in ORN axons
Sema-1a functions non-autonomously through Plexin A to mediate ORN axon-axon
interactions and wiring specificity
(Lattemann et al., 2007
;
Sweeney et al., 2007
).
Dendritic guidance by Slit/Robo and Netrin/Frazzled/DCC
The Drosophila midline is a model for understanding the molecular
cues that control axon navigation in the nervous system
(Garbe and Bashaw, 2004
). The
midline is enriched with guidance cues that can attract or repel axons and
functions as an intermediate target for crossing commissural axons. Critically
important guidance molecules at the midline are the secreted Netrin proteins,
which act through the attractive receptor Frazzled [Deleted in colorectal
carcinoma (DCC)] to attract axons, and the secreted Slits, which repel axons
through the Roundabout (Robo) receptors
(Garbe and Bashaw, 2004
).
Similar to axons, Drosophila motoneuron dendrites show stereotyped
guidance decisions at the CNS midline. Slit and Robo receptors are required
for the guidance of Drosophila motoneuron dendrites away from the CNS
midline (Furrer et al., 2003
).
Likewise, Netrin, acting through Frazzled (DCC), promotes midline crossing by
dendrites (Furrer et al.,
2003
). A role for Netrin/DCC in midline dendrite guidance has also
been described for zebrafish octavolateralis efferent (OLe) neurons in the
cranial motor system (Suli et al.,
2006
). Overexpression of Frazzled and Robo family members in
Drosophila motoneurons can also impact the placement of their arbors
along the medial-lateral axis of the neuropil
(Ou et al., 2008
). For
example, the expression of Frazzled in the RP2 motoneuron results in expansion
of medial branches nearer to the midline, whereas Robo or Robo2 (Leak -
FlyBase) overexpression reduces the number of medial branches
(Ou et al., 2008
). An
interesting question is how a common pool of guidance cues can direct
dendrites and axons from an individual cell to distinct regions of the
neuropil (Furrer et al.,
2003
). This ability could arise from differential timing of
guidance cue expression relative to axon and dendrite growth phases,
differential regulation of guidance receptors
(Godenschwege et al., 2002
),
or differential distribution of downstream signaling pathways
(Polleux et al., 2000
).
In addition to roles for Robo and Slit in regulating midline crossing of
dendrites in some motoneurons, a close analysis of the anterior corner cell
(aCC) motoneuron in Drosophila has revealed a requirement for Slit
and Robo in the growth of collateral dendrite branches
(Furrer et al., 2007
). This
role in dendrite outgrowth appears to extend to other systems as well.
Notably, Slit and Robo had been previously implicated in apical dendrite
growth in cortical pyramidal neurons
(Whitford et al., 2002
).
Furthermore, studies of da neurons have shown that Slit-Robo interactions
influence dendrite growth and branching in class IV neurons. In da dendrites,
loss of Robo or Slit causes a reduction in the number of higher-order branches
and an increase in the average length of the branches that remain, but has no
effect on total dendrite branch length
(Dimitrova et al., 2008
).
Interestingly, this study also found similar branching and growth phenotypes
in enabled (ena) mutant da neurons
(Dimitrova et al., 2008
).
ena encodes a protein that acts with Robo during repulsive axon
guidance (Bashaw et al., 2000
),
indicating that pathways downstream of guidance receptors might be shared in
at least some contexts by axons and dendrites. Together, these studies
indicate that Slit and Robo play a conserved role in dendrite branch
formation. It remains to be determined how repulsive and branching activities
are regulated to give rise to cell-type-specific responses to patterned Slit
expression.
Dendritic guidance and targeting mechanisms have to date been studied in only a few neuron types, but these studies have shown that even a limited repertoire of regulators can have diverse effects. For example, axon guidance cues also control dendrite guidance (Netrin, Slit, Semaphorins), and single guidance factors can have diverse activities. Targeting can be diversified through the combinatorial action of a few transcription factors and perhaps also by extensive alternative splicing. We still know little about how guidance cues interact to shape different dendritic arbors, or about how they diversify the targeting of neurons within particular regions of the nervous system. Moreover, the pathways that operate downstream of guidance receptors and transcription factors are almost entirely unknown. Finally, because the cues that mediate dendrite guidance have been identified largely through candidate gene studies of molecules that are known to guide axons, unbiased explorations might reveal unexpected new pathways.
Dendrite-dendrite interactions and dendritic territory formation
The studies reviewed above indicate that the growth and position of
dendritic territories are strongly influenced by attractive and repulsive cues
derived from their environment. Positive (adhesive) and negative (repulsive)
interactions can also act locally between dendritic arbors to delimit the
territories that they cover. Interactions between dendrites can function to
maintain dendrites within a specific territory, as in fly PNs, which target to
glomeruli in the AL (Zhu and Luo,
2004
). By contrast, repulsive interactions between branches of the
same cell can help to ensure that branches spread out evenly within their
territory; if they occur between neighboring cells, these interactions ensure
that dendrites stop growing at an appropriate size
(Amthor and Oyster, 1995
;
Grueber et al., 2002
;
Grueber et al., 2003b
;
Kramer and Kuwada, 1983
;
Sagasti et al., 2005
;
Sugimura et al., 2003
).
Recent studies have begun to unravel the molecular basis of interactions
between dendrites.
Dscam control of dendritic self-avoidance in Drosophila
In numerous cell types, dendritic branches that originate from the same
neuron (sister branches) will not cross or fasciculate, and this
self-avoidance (see Glossary, Box
2) ensures that dendritic arbors spread evenly across their
territory (Grueber et al.,
2002
; Kramer and Kuwada,
1983
; Millard and Zipursky,
2008
; Sugimura et al.,
2003
). By contrast, branches from different neurons can co-exist.
Selective self-avoidance presents a challenging problem in cell-cell
recognition: how do dendrites recognize and avoid only sister processes from
among the many cell surfaces in their immediate environment? Each neuron
could, in theory, present a unique surface identity, but because large numbers
of neurons occupy a limited space, this would demand a high degree of
molecular diversity. Several studies in Drosophila indicate that
Down syndrome cell adhesion molecule (Dscam), a locus that
can generate 38,016 possible isoforms by alternative splicing, provides this
requisite diversity and plays a crucial role in self-avoidance
(Fig. 6). Dscams are
transmembrane immunoglobulin (Ig) superfamily members that show robust
homophilic binding via their ectodomains, with little or no heterophilic
binding (Wojtowicz et al.,
2004
; Wojtowicz et al.,
2007
). Different neurons appear to express distinct combinations
of Dscam isoforms, which could allow for discrimination of cell surfaces among
neighboring processes (Neves et al.,
2004
; Zhan et al.,
2004
). Phenotypic analyses of mushroom body neurons indicate that
sister axon branches that lack Dscam fail to segregate during development,
consistent with a defect in self-recognition and repulsion
(Wang et al., 2004
;
Wang et al., 2002
;
Zhan et al., 2004
).
Furthermore, animals in which Dscam ectodomain diversity has been reduced to a
single isoform exhibit severe defects in neural circuit formation, indicating
that isoform diversity is crucial for proper development
(Hattori, D. et al.,
2007
).
Several recent investigations of Dscam function during dendrite
morphogenesis in Drosophila indicate a key role in dendrite
self-avoidance. Dendrites of olfactory PNs collapse into compact bundles in
the absence of Dscam function, consistent with a role for Dscam in
dendrite-dendrite repulsion and in the spreading of arbors
(Fig. 6A)
(Zhu, H. et al., 2006
).
Sister dendrites of da sensory neurons normally do not overlap with each other
as they spread along the epidermis, and thus self-avoid
(Fig. 3,
Fig. 6B)
(Grueber et al., 2002
;
Sweeney et al., 2002
).
However, da neuron dendrites that lack Dscam show extensive self-crossing
(Fig. 6Bb)
(Hughes et al., 2007
;
Matthews et al., 2007
;
Soba et al., 2007
). Single
Dscam isoforms rescue da neuron dendritic self-avoidance phenotypes
(Fig. 6Bc). However, when two
different da neurons (the dendrites of which normally overlap) are forced to
express the same Dscam isoform at high levels, their dendrites show ectopic
avoidance and dendritic field segregation
(Fig. 6Bd)
(Hughes et al., 2007
;
Matthews et al., 2007
;
Soba et al., 2007
). Similarly,
adjacent PN dendritic arbors forced to express the same Dscam isoform show
dendrite separation and spreading across larger areas of the AL
(Zhu, H. et al., 2006
).
Altogether, these data suggest that although single Dscam isoforms are
sufficient for self-avoidance, Dscam molecular diversity allows sister
branches to selectively recognize and repel each other, while permitting
dendritic branches from different neurons to co-exist
(Hattori, D. et al., 2007
;
Hughes et al., 2007
;
Matthews et al., 2007
;
Soba et al., 2007
).
Several questions remain about how self-avoidance is carried out by Dscam.
For example, how is adhesion between Dscam molecules converted to repulsive
responses between dendrites? The cytoplasmic tail of Dscam is required for
dendrite repulsion (Matthews et al.,
2007
), but the signaling events downstream of Dscam in dendrites
remain to be elucidated. Questions also remain about how much Dscam diversity
exists among different cell types, how stable or dynamic the Dscam isoform
composition is in individual cells during development, and how repulsive
self-avoidance cues interact with other extrinsic cues during dendrite
patterning. Finally, the relationship between self-avoidance mediated by Dscam
and self-avoidance control by Tricornered/Furry signaling (see below) is not
yet understood.
|
Tiling (see Glossary, Box 2)
is an efficient way of covering an area completely but non-redundantly with
neural processes, and is observed in diverse neuron types
(Amthor and Oyster, 1995
;
Grueber et al., 2002
;
Huckfeldt et al., 2008
;
Lin et al., 2004
;
Millard and Zipursky, 2008
;
Perry and Linden, 1982
;
Wässle and Boycott,
1991
; Wässle et al.,
1981
). Tiling of dendrites from neighboring, and functionally
related, neurons presents an interesting cell recognition problem in
development that remains poorly understood. Among da neurons, tiling is
influenced by repulsive interactions between the dendrites of neurons in the
same morphological class (Gao et al.,
2000
; Grueber et al.,
2003b
; Sugimura et al.,
2003
). The territories of some populations of tiling mammalian
retinal ganglion cells (see Glossary, Box
2) are set up by intrinsic mechanisms with dendrite-dendrite
interactions then fine-tuning these territories
(Lin et al., 2004
). The
spatial distribution and territories of vertebrate retinal horizontal cells
are established by transient homotypic interactions between neurites
(Huckfeldt et al., 2008
).
Finally, Drosophila motoneuron dendrites in the CNS show a domain
organization similar to tiling that does not appear to rely on
dendrite-dendrite repulsion mechanisms
(Landgraf et al., 2003
).
Instead, the dendritic domains of these neurons might be defined by as yet
unidentified molecular boundaries set up early in development as the embryo is
partitioned into parasegments (Landgraf et
al., 2003
). Thus, there are multiple possible strategies for
defining dendritic field boundaries and tiled arrangements.
Molecular control of tiling in Drosophila da neurons
Among Drosophila da neurons there are two classes that tile the
body wall independently (class III and class IV neurons), and thus tiling in
each class is likely to require distinct recognition signals
(Grueber et al., 2002
).
Neither of these putative recognition signals is known, and Dscam appears to
be dispensable for tiling in both classes
(Hughes et al., 2007
;
Matthews et al., 2007
;
Soba et al., 2007
). Several
studies indicate that the seven-pass transmembrane cadherin Flamingo (Fmi;
Starry night - FlyBase) acts cell-autonomously in dendrites to restrict their
growth (Gao et al., 1999
;
Gao et al., 2000
;
Grueber et al., 2002
;
Kimura et al., 2006
;
Reuter et al., 2003
;
Sweeney et al., 2002
). Fmi
appears to be expressed in all da neuron classes and acts during early stages
of arbor development to prevent premature dendritic elaboration and at later
stages to prevent heteroneuronal branch overlap at a dorsal midline boundary
between opposing class IV neurons (Gao et
al., 2000
; Kimura et al.,
2006
; Sweeney et al.,
2002
). The cadherin domains of Fmi appear to be dispensable for
its early roles, but are required during its later functions in preventing the
overlapping of dendritic fields (Kimura et
al., 2006
). Mutations in Tropomyosin 2 cause similar
overextension phenotypes as fmi mutants and the two genes show a
genetic interaction (Li and Gao,
2003
). The mammalian seven-pass transmembrane cadherins Celsr2 and
Celsr3 have roles in promoting and restricting dendritic growth, respectively,
in cultured rat hippocampal and cortical neurons
(Shima et al., 2007
).
Experiments with chimeric and mutated proteins suggest that the different
roles can be traced to an amino acid difference in their transmembrane domains
(Shima et al., 2007
).
Homophilic binding between Celsr proteins causes increases in intracellular
Ca2+, with Celsr2 stimulating more Ca2+ release than
Celsr3 (Shima et al., 2007
).
It is hypothesized that these different Ca2+-release properties
might activate distinct intracellular cascades to mediate opposing roles in
neurite outgrowth (Shima et al.,
2007
).
A signaling pathway that involves Furry (Fry) and the nuclear Dbf2-related
(NDR) kinase Tricornered (Trc) controls da neuron branching, self-avoidance
and tiling (Emoto et al.,
2004
; Emoto et al.,
2006
). Trc restricts dendrite branching in all da neurons via
negative regulation of the small GTPase Rac1, and promotes self-avoidance and
tiling in class IV neurons in a Rac1-independent manner
(Emoto et al., 2004
). Neurons
mutant for hippo (hpo), which encodes a Ste20 family kinase
with important roles in tissue growth control
(Harvey et al., 2003
), show
tiling phenotypes similar to trc mutants
(Emoto et al., 2006
). Trc and
Hpo interact genetically, and an association between Trc and Hpo leads to the
phosphorylation of Trc at a threonine residue shown to be important for normal
dendritic tiling (Emoto et al.,
2004
; Emoto et al.,
2006
). Hpo signaling also has a role in maintaining a fully tiled
arrangement of neurons through a second Drosophila NDR kinase, Warts
(Wts), and Salvador, a WW-domain protein that interacts with Wts
(Emoto et al., 2006
). Studies
of Hippo and Trc/Fry provide an anchor for future studies of tiling
mechanisms, as they probably represent components of a signaling pathway that
is important for dendrite turning in response to like-type dendrites
(Emoto et al., 2004
), with
both upstream and downstream players yet to be identified. Candidate gene
studies of receptors or adhesion molecules that might mediate tiling, perhaps
by utilizing genome-wide RNAi libraries
(Dietzl et al., 2007
), might
also provide insight into these pathways.
Self-avoidance and tiling control in mammals
What molecule or molecules regulate self-avoidance and tiling in
vertebrates? No molecules had been identified until recent studies identified
a crucial role for Dscam in a subset of amacrine cells (see Glossary,
Box 2)
(Fuerst et al., 2008
).
Vertebrate Dscam is expressed in the nervous system and engages in homophilic
binding, but is not highly diversified by alternative splicing of the
extracellular domain (Agarwala et al.,
2001
; Agarwala et al.,
2000
; Yamakawa et al.,
1998
). Examination of retinas from mice carrying a spontaneous
mutation in Dscam revealed disrupted cell body spacing and neurite
avoidance deficits in two amacrine cell populations that express Dscam:
dopaminergic and bNOS-expressing amacrine cells
(Fuerst et al., 2008
). In the
retina, Dscam functions in subsets of neurons, the arbors of which are
segregated from one another in the inner plexiform layer (see Glossary,
Box 2), implying that distinct
cues regulate self-avoidance and tiling in other cell types that do not
express Dscam. Dscam is expressed in the mouse brain, including hippocampus,
cerebellum and olfactory bulb, and along the spinal cord
(Agarwala et al., 2001
;
Yamakawa et al., 1998
), and
it will be important to examine whether it affects dendrite morphogenesis more
broadly. Recent work suggests that Dscam is remarkably multifunctional, acting
as an attractive or adhesive cue for synaptic matching
(Yamagata and Sanes, 2008
),
and as a receptor for Netrin during axon guidance
(Andrews et al., 2008
;
Ly et al., 2008
). Likewise,
the identification of other receptors or cell adhesion molecules expressed in
select retinal cell types should help to identify the additional regulators of
self-avoidance and tiling that are implied by the cell-type-specific action of
Dscam (Fuerst et al.,
2008
).
Neuronal activity-dependent development of Drosophila dendrites
The control of dendritic development by neuronal activity is central to the
formation of functional circuits and developmental plasticity in vertebrate
nervous systems. Neuronal activity in vertebrates can influence dendrite
growth, branching and stabilization, as well as induce retraction and pruning
of dendrites to refine arbor projection patterns
(Buttery et al., 2006
;
Chen and Ghosh, 2005
;
Ramos et al., 2007
). In
vertebrates, neural activity increases intracellular Ca2+ via
voltage-gated calcium channels leading to the regulation of several
intracellular signaling cascades, which can ultimately cause changes in
transcription that affect dendrite development
(Aizawa et al., 2004
;
Flavell and Greenberg, 2008
;
Gaudillière et al.,
2004
; Redmond,
2008
; Redmond et al.,
2002
; Tao et al.,
1998
; Wayman et al.,
2006
).
Several recent studies indicate that neural activity can also have diverse
effects on dendrite growth and branching of motoneurons in Drosophila
(Duch et al., 2008
;
Hartwig et al., 2008
;
Tripodi et al., 2008
). One
recent study identified roles for synaptic contacts and presynaptic activity
in restricting growth of embryonic aCC motoneuron dendrites
(Tripodi et al., 2008
). The
effects on dendrite growth are spatially restricted and mediated by two
separable cues: growth-slowing effects of synaptic contact are restricted to
synaptic branches, while the growth of adjacent, but non-synaptic sister
neurites is inhibited by transmitter release. The inhibitory effects of
presynaptic transmitter release on non-synaptic sister neurite growth involves
protein kinase A (PKA)-dependent signaling
(Tripodi et al., 2008
). These
results raise the interesting possibility that a homeostatic response in
motoneuron dendrites adjusts arbor size during development to ensure
appropriate levels of synaptic input
(Tripodi et al., 2008
).
Studies of later-stage motoneurons show that genetic manipulations that
increase intrinsic motoneuron excitability (by targeted expression of
genetically modified potassium channel subunits) lead to increases in total
dendritic growth (Duch et al.,
2008
; Hartwig et al.,
2008
). Dendritic overgrowth in cultured hyperexcitable larval
motoneurons is prevented when voltage-gated calcium channels are inhibited
with a toxin, and normal growth and neuronal activity-dependent responses
require the immediate-early transcription factor AP-1 [a heterodimer of Fos
(Kay) and Jun (Jra)] (Hartwig et al.,
2008
), defining a transcriptional pathway by which neuronal
activity can modulate dendritic architecture in Drosophila.
Manipulations that increase or decrease intrinsic excitability of flight
motoneurons likewise lead to dendritic overgrowth (increases in total dendrite
length) and thus increase the amount of dendritic surface available for
synaptic contacts (Duch et al.,
2008
). In these cells, increased excitability causes increases in
the number of dendritic branches, whereas decreased excitability primarily
affects dendrite elongation, indicating that changes in intrinsic excitability
have diverse effects on dendritic growth
(Duch et al., 2008
). Overall,
these results demonstrate roles for neuronal activity in Drosophila
dendrite development. Further genetic studies to dissect the molecular
mechanisms that underlie these diverse alterations in structure are likely to
identify new components of neuronal activity-dependent pathways that shape
dendrite morphology.
Conclusion
In recent years, our understanding of the molecular basis of dendritic
growth, branching, targeting and field formation has greatly expanded. In
addition to the genes and pathways characterized in recent studies and
reviewed here, recent screening approaches spanning different
Drosophila chromosomes have identified more than 70 new candidate
genes from an RNAi-based approach (Parrish
et al., 2006
), a large number of candidate loci affecting axon
and/or dendrite development of da neurons from forward genetic screens
(Gao et al., 1999
;
Grueber et al., 2007
;
Medina et al., 2006
;
Satoh et al., 2008
;
Zheng et al., 2008
) and, from
a gain-of-function approach, 35 and 51 candidate lines affecting da dendrite
morphology and central neuron morphology, respectively
(Ou et al., 2008
). Although
these are only numerical results from various screens, they provide evidence
that our understanding of the basic mechanisms of dendrite morphogenesis is
still far from complete, but predict rapid progress in the years to come. In
particular, progress is likely to come with the identification of the cell
biological principles of dendrite growth and branching, with an increased
understanding of how transcription factors control dendritic diversity and
targeting through the identification of target genes, with the deciphering of
the signaling pathways that lie downstream of attractive and repulsive
dendritic guidance, and from determining the extent and molecular basis of the
neuronal activity-dependent control of morphogenesis. An overarching challenge
will be to determine how these numerous points of regulation are integrated by
the developing dendrite branch to generate the diverse, yet type-specific,
arborization patterns that occur throughout the nervous system. The ability to
manipulate various features of dendritic arbors might ultimately help to
provide insights into the functional relevance of distinct dendritic
patterns.
Footnotes
We thank members of the Grueber laboratory for discussions and Drs L. Luo and B. Ye for input on figures. The work in our laboratory is supported by an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship (M.M.C.), a Ruth L. Kirschstein NIH Predoctoral Fellowship (B.J.M.), and the Klingenstein Fund, the Searle Scholars Program, the McKnight Endowment Fund for Neuroscience, an Irma T. Hirschl/Monique Weill-Caulier Career Award, and the NIH (W.B.G.). Deposited in PMC for release after 12 months.
* These authors contributed equally to this work ![]()
REFERENCES
Agarwala, K. L., Nakamura, S., Tsutsumi, Y. and Yamakawa, K.
(2000). Down syndrome cell adhesion molecule DSCAM mediates
homophilic intercellular adhesion. Brain Res. Mol. Brain
Res. 79,118
-126.[CrossRef][Medline]
Agarwala, K. L., Ganesh, S., Amano, K., Suzuki, T. and Yamakawa,
K. (2001). DSCAM, a highly conserved gene in mammals,
expressed in differentiating mouse brain. Biochem. Biophys. Res.
Commun. 281,697
-705.[CrossRef][Medline]
Ainsley, J. A., Pettus, J. M., Bosenko, D., Gerstein, C. E.,
Zinkevich, N., Anderson, M. G., Adams, C. M., Welsh, M. J. and Johnson, W.
A. (2003). Enhanced locomotion caused by loss of the
Drosophila DEG/ENaC protein Pickpocket1. Curr. Biol.
13,1557
-1563.[CrossRef][Medline]
Aizawa, H., Hu, S. C., Bobb, K., Balakrishnan, K., Ince, G.,
Gurevich, I., Cowan, M. and Ghosh, A. (2004). Dendrite
development regulated by CREST, a calcium-regulated transcriptional activator.
Science 303,197
-202.
Alvarez, V. A. and Sabatini, B. L. (2007).
Anatomical and physiological plasticity of dendritic spines. Annu.
Rev. Neurosci. 30,79
-97.[CrossRef][Medline]
Amthor, F. R. and Oyster, C. W. (1995). Spatial
organization of retinal information about the direction of image motion.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
92,4002
-4005.
Andrews, G. L., Tanglao, S., Farmer, W. T., Morin, S., Brotman,
S., Berberoglu, M. A., Price, H., Fernandez, G. C., Mastick, G. S., Charron,
F. et al. (2008). Dscam guides embryonic axons by
Netrin-dependent and -independent functions.
Development 135,3839
-3848.
Bashaw, G. J., Kidd, T., Murray, D., Pawson, T. and Goodman, C.
S. (2000). Repulsive axon guidance: Abelson and Enabled play
opposing roles downstream of the roundabout receptor.
Cell 101,703
-715.[CrossRef][Medline]
Blochlinger, K., Bodmer, R., Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y. N.
(1990). Patterns of expression of cut, a protein required for
external sensory organ development in wild-type and cut mutant Drosophila
embryos. Genes Dev. 4,1322
-1331.
Brechbiel, J. L. and Gavis, E. R. (2008).
Spatial regulation of nanos is required for its function in dendrite
morphogenesis. Curr. Biol.
18,745
-750.[CrossRef][Medline]
Buttery, P., Beg, A. A., Chih, B., Broder, A., Mason, C. A. and
Scheiffele, P. (2006). The diacylglycerol-binding protein
alpha 1-chimaerin regulates dendritic morphology. Proc. Natl. Acad.
Sci. USA 103,1924
-1929.
Chen, Y. and Ghosh, A. (2005). Regulation of
dendritic development by neuronal activity. J.
Neurobiol. 64,4
-10.[CrossRef][Medline]
Cobos, I., Long, J. E., Thwin, M. T. and Rubenstein, J. L.
(2006). Cellular patterns of transcription factor expression in
developing cortical interneurons. Cereb. Cortex
16 Suppl. 1,i82
-i88.
Couto, A., Alenius, M. and Dickson, B. J.
(2005). Molecular, anatomical, and functional organization of the
Drosophila olfactory system. Curr. Biol.
15,1535
-1547.[CrossRef][Medline]
Crozatier, M. and Vincent, A. (2008). Control
of multidendritic neuron differentiation in Drosophila: the role of Collier.
Dev. Biol. 315,232
-242.[CrossRef][Medline]
Dietzl, G., Chen, D., Schnorrer, F., Su, K. C., Barinova, Y.,
Fellner, M., Gasser, B., Kinsey, K., Oppel, S., Scheiblauer, S. et al.
(2007). A genome-wide transgenic RNAi library for conditional
gene inactivation in Drosophila. Nature
448,151
-156.[CrossRef][Medline]
Dimitrova, S., Reissaus, A. and Tavosanis, G.
(2008). Slit and Robo regulate dendrite branching and elongation
of space-filling neurons in Drosophila. Dev. Biol.
324, 18-30.[CrossRef][Medline]
Duch, C., Vonhoff, F. and Ryglewski, S. (2008).
Dendrite elongation and dendritic branching are affected separately by
different forms of intrinsic motoneuron excitability. J.
Neurophysiol. 100,2525
-2536.
Emmons, R. B., Duncan, D., Estes, P. A., Kiefel, P., Mosher, J.
T., Sonnenfeld, M., Ward, M. P., Duncan, I. and Crews, S. T.
(1999). The spineless-aristapedia and tango bHLH-PAS proteins
interact to control antennal and tarsal development in Drosophila.
Development 126,3937
-3945.[Abstract]
Emoto, K., He, Y., Ye, B., Grueber, W. B., Adler, P. N., Jan, L.
Y. and Jan, Y. N. (2004). Control of dendritic branching and
tiling by the Tricornered-kinase/Furry signaling pathway in Drosophila sensory
neurons. Cell 119,245
-256.[CrossRef][Medline]
Emoto, K., Parrish, J. Z., Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y. N.
(2006). The tumour suppressor Hippo acts with the NDR kinases in
dendritic tiling and maintenance. Nature
443,210
-213.[CrossRef][Medline]
Flavell, S. W. and Greenberg, M. E. (2008).
Signaling mechanisms linking neuronal activity to gene expression and
plasticity of the nervous system. Annu. Rev. Neurosci.
31,563
-590.[CrossRef][Medline]
Fuerst, P. G., Koizumi, A., Masland, R. H. and Burgess, R.
W. (2008). Neurite arborization and mosaic spacing in the
mouse retina require DSCAM. Nature
451,470
-474.[CrossRef][Medline]
Furrer, M. P., Kim, S., Wolf, B. and Chiba, A.
(2003). Robo and Frazzled/DCC mediate dendritic guidance at the
CNS midline. Nat. Neurosci.
6, 223-230.[CrossRef][Medline]
Furrer, M. P., Vasenkova, I., Kamiyama, D., Rosado, Y. and
Chiba, A. (2007). Slit and Robo control the development of
dendrites in Drosophila CNS. Development
134,3795
-3804.
Gao, F. B., Brenman, J. E., Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y. N.
(1999). Genes regulating dendritic outgrowth, branching, and
routing in Drosophila. Genes Dev.
13,2549
-2561.
Gao, F. B., Kohwi, M., Brenman, J. E., Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y.
N. (2000). Control of dendritic field formation in
Drosophila: the roles of flamingo and competition between homologous neurons.
Neuron 28,91
-101.[CrossRef][Medline]
Garbe, D. S. and Bashaw, G. J. (2004). Axon
guidance at the midline: from mutants to mechanisms. Crit. Rev.
Biochem. Mol. Biol. 39,319
-341.[CrossRef][Medline]
Garel, S., Marín, F., Mattéi, M. G., Vesque, C.,
Vincent, A. and Charnay, P. (1997). Family of
Ebf/Olf-1-related genes potentially involved in neuronal differentiation and
regional specification in the central nervous system. Dev.
Dyn. 210,191
-205.[CrossRef][Medline]
Gaudillière, B., Konishi, Y., de la Iglesia, N., Yao, G.
and Bonni, A. (2004). A CaMKII-NeuroD signaling pathway
specifies dendritic morphogenesis. Neuron
41,229
-241.[CrossRef][Medline]
Godenschwege, T. A., Simpson, J. H., Shan, X., Bashaw, G. J.,
Goodman, C. S. and Murphey, R. K. (2002). Ectopic expression
in the giant fiber system of Drosophila reveals distinct roles for roundabout
(Robo), Robo2, and Robo3 in dendritic guidance and synaptic connectivity.
J. Neurosci. 22,3117
-3129.
Goeke, S., Greene, E. A., Grant, P. K., Gates, M. A., Crowner,
D., Aigaki, T. and Giniger, E. (2003). Alternative splicing
of lola generates 19 transcription factors controlling axon guidance in
Drosophila. Nat. Neurosci.
6, 917-924.[CrossRef][Medline]
Grueber, W. B., Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y. N.
(2002). Tiling of the Drosophila epidermis by multidendritic
sensory neurons. Development
129,2867
-2878.[Medline]
Grueber, W. B., Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y. N.
(2003a). Different levels of the homeodomain protein cut regulate
distinct dendrite branching patterns of Drosophila multidendritic neurons.
Cell 112,805
-818.[CrossRef][Medline]
Grueber, W. B., Ye, B., Moore, A. W., Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y.
N. (2003b). Dendrites of distinct classes of Drosophila
sensory neurons show different capacities for homotypic repulsion.
Curr. Biol. 13,618
-626.[CrossRef][Medline]
Grueber, W. B., Ye, B., Yang, C. H., Younger, S., Borden, K.,
Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y. N. (2007). Projections of Drosophila
multidendritic neurons in the central nervous system: links with peripheral
dendrite morphology. Development
134, 55-64.
Hartwig, C. L., Worrell, J., Levine, R. B., Ramaswami, M. and
Sanyal, S. (2008). Normal dendrite growth in Drosophila motor
neurons requires the AP-1 transcription factor. Dev.
Neurobiol. 68,1225
-1242.[CrossRef][Medline]
Harvey, K. F., Pfleger, C. M. and Hariharan, I. K.
(2003). The Drosophila Mst ortholog, hippo, restricts growth and
cell proliferation and promotes apoptosis. Cell
114,457
-467.[CrossRef][Medline]
Hattori, D., Demir, E., Kim, H. W., Viragh, E., Zipursky, S. L.
and Dickson, B. J. (2007). Dscam diversity is essential for
neuronal wiring and self-recognition. Nature
449,223
-227.[CrossRef][Medline]
Hattori, Y., Sugimura, K. and Uemura, T.
(2007). Selective expression of Knot/Collier, a transcriptional
regulator of the EBF/Olf-1 family, endows the Drosophila sensory system with
neuronal class-specific elaborated dendritic patterns. Genes
Cells 12,1011
-1022.
Horton, A. C. and Ehlers, M. D. (2003). Dual
modes of endoplasmic reticulum-to-Golgi transport in dendrites revealed by
live-cell imaging. J. Neurosci.
23,6188
-6199.
Horton, A. C., Rácz, B., Monson, E. E., Lin, A. L.,
Weinberg, R. J. and Ehlers, M. D. (2005). Polarized secretory
trafficking directs cargo for asymmetric dendrite growth and morphogenesis.
Neuron 48,757
-771.[CrossRef][Medline]
Huber, A. B., Kolodkin, A. L., Ginty, D. D. and Cloutier, J.
F. (2003). Signaling at the growth cone: ligand-receptor
complexes and the control of axon growth and guidance. Annu. Rev.
Neurosci. 26,509
-563.[CrossRef][Medline]
Huckfeldt, R. M., Schubert, T., Morgan, J. L., Godinho, L., Di
Cristo, G., Huang, Z. J. and Wong, R. O. (2008). Transient
neurites of retinal horizontal cells exhibit columnar tiling via homotypic
interactions. Nat. Neurosci.
12, 35-43.[CrossRef][Medline]
Hughes, M. E., Bortnick, R., Tsubouchi, A., Bäumer, P.,
Kondo, M., Uemura, T. and Schmucker, D. (2007). Homophilic
Dscam interactions control complex dendrite morphogenesis.
Neuron 54,417
-427.[CrossRef][Medline]
Jefferis, G. S. (2006). Wiring specificity:
axon-dendrite matching refines the olfactory map. Curr.
Biol. 16,R373
-R376.[CrossRef][Medline]
Jefferis, G. S., Marin, E. C., Stocker, R. F. and Luo, L.
(2001). Target neuron prespecification in the olfactory map of
Drosophila. Nature 414,204
-208.[CrossRef][Medline]
Jefferis, G. S., Vyas, R. M., Berdnik, D., Ramaekers, A.,
Stocker, R. F., Tanaka, N. K., Ito, K. and Luo, L. (2004).
Developmental origin of wiring specificity in the olfactory system of
Drosophila. Development
131,117
-130.
Jinushi-Nakao, S., Arvind, R., Amikura, R., Kinameri, E., Liu,
A. W. and Moore, A. W. (2007). Knot/Collier and cut control
different aspects of dendrite cytoskeleton and synergize to define final arbor
shape. Neuron 56,963
-978.[CrossRef][Medline]
Kania, A. and Jessell, T. M. (2003).
Topographic motor projections in the limb imposed by LIM homeodomain protein
regulation of ephrin-A:EphA interactions. Neuron
38,581
-596.[CrossRef][Medline]
Kelsch, W., Mosley, C. P., Lin, C. W. and Lois, C.
(2007). Distinct mammalian precursors are committed to generate
neurons with defined dendritic projection patterns. PLoS
Biol. 5,e300
.[CrossRef][Medline]
Kim, M. D., Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y. N. (2006).
The bHLH-PAS protein Spineless is necessary for the diversification of
dendrite morphology of Drosophila dendritic arborization neurons.
Genes Dev. 20,2806
-2819.
Kimura, H., Usui, T., Tsubouchi, A. and Uemura, T.
(2006). Potential dual molecular interaction of the Drosophila
7-pass transmembrane cadherin Flamingo in dendritic morphogenesis.
J. Cell Sci. 119,1118
-1129.
Komiyama, T. and Luo, L. (2007). Intrinsic
control of precise dendritic targeting by an ensemble of transcription
factors. Curr. Biol. 17,278
-285.[CrossRef][Medline]
Komiyama, T., Johnson, W. A., Luo, L. and Jefferis, G. S.
(2003). From lineage to wiring specificity. POU domain
transcription factors control precise connections of Drosophila olfactory
projection neurons. Cell
112,157
-167.[CrossRef][Medline]
Komiyama, T., Sweeney, L. B., Schuldiner, O., Garcia, K. C. and
Luo, L. (2007). Graded expression of semaphorin-1a
cell-autonomously directs dendritic targeting of olfactory projection neurons.
Cell 128,399
-410.[CrossRef][Medline]
Kramer, A. P. and Kuwada, J. Y. (1983).
Formation of the receptive fields of leech mechanosensory neurons during
embryonic development. J. Neurosci.
3,2474
-2486.[Abstract]
Kuo, C. T., Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y. N. (2005).
Dendrite-specific remodeling of Drosophila sensory neurons requires matrix
metalloproteases, ubiquitin-proteasome, and ecdysone signaling.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
102,15230
-15235.
Kuo, C. T., Zhu, S., Younger, S., Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y. N.
(2006). Identification of E2/E3 ubiquitinating enzymes and
caspase activity regulating Drosophila sensory neuron dendrite pruning.
Neuron 51,283
-290.[CrossRef][Medline]
Labrador, J. P., O'Keefe, D., Yoshikawa, S., McKinnon, R. D.,
Thomas, J. B. and Bashaw, G. J. (2005). The homeobox
transcription factor even-skipped regulates netrin-receptor expression to
control dorsal motor-axon projections in Drosophila. Curr.
Biol. 15,1413
-1419.[CrossRef][Medline]
Landgraf, M., Jeffrey, V., Fujioka, M., Jaynes, J. B. and Bate,
M. (2003). Embryonic origins of a motor system: motor
dendrites form a myotopic map in Drosophila. PLoS
Biol. 1,E41
.[Medline]
Lattemann, M., Zierau, A., Schulte, C., Seidl, S., Kuhlmann, B.
and Hummel, T. (2007). Semaphorin-1a controls receptor
neuron-specific axonal convergence in the primary olfactory center of
Drosophila. Neuron 53,169
-184.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lee, R., Petros, T. J. and Mason, C. A. (2008).
Zic2 regulates retinal ganglion cell axon avoidance of ephrinB2 through
inducing expression of the guidance receptor EphB1. J.
Neurosci. 28,5910
-5919.
Lee, T., Marticke, S., Sung, C., Robinow, S. and Luo, L.
(2000). Cell-autonomous requirement of the USP/EcR-B ecdysone
receptor for mushroom body neuronal remodeling in Drosophila.
Neuron 28,807
-818.[CrossRef][Medline]
Li, W. and Gao, F. B. (2003). Actin
filament-stabilizing protein tropomyosin regulates the size of dendritic
fields. J. Neurosci. 23,6171
-6175.
Li, W., Wang, F., Menut, L. and Gao, F. B.
(2004). BTB/POZ-zinc finger protein abrupt suppresses dendritic
branching in a neuronal subtype-specific and dosage-dependent manner.
Neuron 43,823
-834.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lichtneckert, R., Nobs, L. and Reichert, H.
(2008). empty spiracles is required for the development of
olfactory projection neuron circuitry in Drosophila.
Development 135,2415
-2424.
Lin, B., Wang, S. W. and Masland, R. H. (2004).
Retinal ganglion cell type, size, and spacing can be specified independent of
homotypic dendritic contacts. Neuron
43,475
-485.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lippman, J. and Dunaevsky, A. (2005). Dendritic
spine morphogenesis and plasticity. J. Neurobiol.
64, 47-57.[CrossRef][Medline]
Liu, Z., Steward, R. and Luo, L. (2000).
Drosophila Lis1 is required for neuroblast proliferation, dendritic
elaboration and axonal transport. Nat. Cell Biol.
2, 776-783.[CrossRef][Medline]
London, M. and Häusser, M. (2005).
Dendritic computation. Annu. Rev. Neurosci.
28,503
-532.[CrossRef][Medline]
Luo, L. and Flanagan, J. G. (2007). Development
of continuous and discrete neural maps. Neuron
56,284
-300.[CrossRef][Medline]
Ly, A., Nikolaev, A., Suresh, G., Zheng, Y., Tessier-Lavigne, M.
and Stein, E. (2008). DSCAM is a netrin receptor that
collaborates with DCC in mediating turning responses to netrin-1.
Cell 133,1241
-1254.[CrossRef][Medline]
Marin, E. C., Watts, R. J., Tanaka, N. K., Ito, K. and Luo,
L. (2005). Developmentally programmed remodeling of the
Drosophila olfactory circuit. Development
132,725
-737.
Matthews, B. J., Kim, M. E., Flanagan, J. J., Hattori, D.,
Clemens, J. C., Zipursky, S. L. and Grueber, W. B. (2007).
Dendrite self-avoidance is controlled by Dscam. Cell
129,593
-604.[CrossRef][Medline]
Medina, P. M., Swick, L. L., Andersen, R., Blalock, Z. and
Brenman, J. E. (2006). A novel forward genetic screen for
identifying mutations affecting larval neuronal dendrite development in
Drosophila melanogaster. Genetics
172,2325
-2335.
Millard, S. S. and Zipursky, S. L. (2008).
Dscam-mediated repulsion controls tiling and self-avoidance. Curr.
Opin. Neurobiol. 24,597
-620.
Moore, A. W., Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y. N. (2002).
hamlet, a binary genetic switch between single- and multiple-dendrite neuron
morphology. Science 297,1355
-1358.
Morgan, J. L., Dhingra, A., Vardi, N. and Wong, R. O.
(2006). Axons and dendrites originate from neuroepithelial-like
processes of retinal bipolar cells. Nat. Neurosci.
9, 85-92.[CrossRef][Medline]
Mumm, J. S., Williams, P. R., Godinho, L., Koerber, A., Pittman,
A. J., Roeser, T., Chien, C. B., Baier, H. and Wong, R. O.
(2006). In vivo imaging reveals dendritic targeting of laminated
afferents by zebrafish retinal ganglion cells. Neuron
52,609
-621.[CrossRef][Medline]
Neves, G., Zucker, J., Daly, M. and Chess, A.
(2004). Stochastic yet biased expression of multiple Dscam splice
variants by individual cells. Nat. Genet.
36,240
-246.[CrossRef][Medline]
Nieto, M., Monuki, E. S., Tang, H., Imitola, J., Haubst, N.,
Khoury, S. J., Cunningham, J., Gotz, M. and Walsh, C. A.
(2004). Expression of Cux-1 and Cux-2 in the subventricular zone
and upper layers II-IV of the cerebral cortex. J. Comp.
Neurol. 479,168
-180.[CrossRef][Medline]
Nott, A., Watson, P. M., Robinson, J. D., Crepaldi, L. and
Riccio, A. (2008). S-Nitrosylation of histone deacetylase 2
induces chromatin remodelling in neurons. Nature
455,411
-415.[CrossRef][Medline]
Ou, Y., Chwalla, B., Landgraf, M. and van Meyel, D.
(2008). Identification of genes influencing dendrite
morphogenesis in developing peripheral sensory and central motor neurons.
Neural Develop. 3,16
.[CrossRef][Medline]
Parrish, J. Z., Kim, M. D., Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y. N.
(2006). Genome-wide analyses identify transcription factors
required for proper morphogenesis of Drosophila sensory neuron dendrites.
Genes Dev. 20,820
-835.
Parrish, J. Z., Emoto, K., Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y. N.
(2007). Polycomb genes interact with the tumor suppressor genes
hippo and warts in the maintenance of Drosophila sensory neuron dendrites.
Genes Dev. 21,956
-972.
Perry, V. H. and Linden, R. (1982). Evidence
for dendritic competition in the developing retina.
Nature 297,683
-685.[CrossRef][Medline]
Polleux, F., Morrow, T. and Ghosh, A. (2000).
Semaphorin 3A is a chemoattractant for cortical apical dendrites.
Nature 404,567
-573.[CrossRef][Medline]
Ramos, B., Gaudillière, B., Bonni, A. and Gill, G.
(2007). Transcription factor Sp4 regulates dendritic patterning
during cerebellar maturation. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.
USA 104,9882
-9887.
Redmond, L. (2008). Translating neuronal
activity into dendrite elaboration: signaling to the nucleus.
Neurosignals 16,194
-208.[CrossRef][Medline]
Redmond, L., Kashani, A. H. and Ghosh, A.
(2002). Calcium regulation of dendritic growth via CaM kinase IV
and CREB-mediated transcription. Neuron
34,999
-1010.[CrossRef][Medline]
Reuter, J. E., Nardine, T. M., Penton, A., Billuart, P., Scott,
E. K., Usui, T., Uemura, T. and Luo, L. (2003). A mosaic
genetic screen for genes necessary for Drosophila mushroom body neuronal
morphogenesis. Development
130,1203
-1213.
Roll-Mecak, A. and Vale, R. D. (2005). The
Drosophila homologue of the hereditary spastic paraplegia protein, spastin,
severs and disassembles microtubules. Curr. Biol.
15,650
-655.[CrossRef][Medline]
Rolls, M. M., Satoh, D., Clyne, P. J., Henner, A. L., Uemura, T.
and Doe, C. Q. (2007). Polarity and intracellular
compartmentalization of Drosophila neurons. Neural
Develop. 2,7
.[CrossRef][Medline]
Sagasti, A., Guido, M. R., Raible, D. W. and Schier, A. F.
(2005). Repulsive interactions shape the morphologies and
functional arrangement of zebrafish peripheral sensory arbors.
Curr. Biol. 15,804
-814.[CrossRef][Medline]
Satoh, D., Sato, D., Tsuyama, T., Saito, M., Ohkura, H., Rolls,
M. M., Ishikawa, F. and Uemura, T. (2008). Spatial control of
branching within dendritic arbors by dynein-dependent transport of
Rab5-endosomes. Nat. Cell Biol.
10,1164
-1171.[CrossRef][Medline]
Shima, Y., Kawaguchi, S. Y., Kosaka, K., Nakayama, M., Hoshino,
M., Nabeshima, Y., Hirano, T. and Uemura, T. (2007). Opposing
roles in neurite growth control by two seven-pass transmembrane cadherins.
Nat. Neurosci. 10,963
-969.[CrossRef][Medline]
Soba, P., Zhu, S., Emoto, K., Younger, S., Yang, S. J., Yu, H.
H., Lee, T., Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y. N. (2007). Drosophila
sensory neurons require Dscam for dendritic self-avoidance and proper
dendritic field organization. Neuron
54,403
-416.[CrossRef][Medline]
Spletter, M. L., Liu, J., Liu, J., Su, H., Giniger, E.,
Komiyama, T., Quake, S. and Luo, L. (2007). Lola regulates
Drosophila olfactory projection neuron identity and targeting specificity.
Neural Develop. 2,14
.[CrossRef][Medline]
Stone, M. C., Roegiers, F. and Rolls, M. M.
(2008). Microtubules have opposite orientation in axons and
dendrites of Drosophila neurons. Mol. Biol. Cell
19,4122
-4129.
Sugimura, K., Yamamoto, M., Niwa, R., Satoh, D., Goto, S.,
Taniguchi, M., Hayashi, S. and Uemura, T. (2003). Distinct
developmental modes and lesion-induced reactions of dendrites of two classes
of Drosophila sensory neurons. J. Neurosci.
23,3752
-3760.
Sugimura, K., Satoh, D., Estes, P., Crews, S. and Uemura, T.
(2004). Development of morphological diversity of dendrites in
Drosophila by the BTB-zinc finger protein abrupt.
Neuron 43,809
-822.[CrossRef][Medline]
Suli, A., Mortimer, N., Shepherd, I. and Chien, C. B.
(2006). Netrin/DCC signaling controls contralateral dendrites of
octavolateralis efferent neurons. J. Neurosci.
26,13328
-13337.
Sweeney, L. B., Couto, A., Chou, Y. H., Berdnik, D., Dickson, B.
J., Luo, L. and Komiyama, T. (2007). Temporal target
restriction of olfactory receptor neurons by Semaphorin-1a/PlexinA-mediated
axon-axon interactions. Neuron
53,185
-200.[CrossRef][Medline]
Sweeney, N. T., Li, W. and Gao, F. B. (2002).
Genetic manipulation of single neurons in vivo reveals specific roles of
flamingo in neuronal morphogenesis. Dev. Biol.
247, 76-88.[CrossRef][Medline]
Sweeney, N. T., Brenman, J. E., Jan, Y. N. and Gao, F. B.
(2006). The coiled-coil protein shrub controls neuronal
morphogenesis in Drosophila. Curr. Biol.
16,1006
-1011.[CrossRef][Medline]
Tao, X., Finkbeiner, S., Arnold, D. B., Shaywitz, A. J. and
Greenberg, M. E. (1998). Ca2+ influx regulates
BDNF transcription by a CREB family transcription factor-dependent mechanism.
Neuron 20,709
-726.[CrossRef][Medline]
Tripodi, M., Evers, J. F., Mauss, A., Bate, M. and Landgraf,
M. (2008). Structural homeostasis: compensatory adjustments
of dendritic arbor geometry in response to variations of synaptic input.
PLoS Biol. 6,e260
.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wang, J., Zugates, C. T., Liang, I. H., Lee, C. H. and Lee,
T. (2002). Drosophila Dscam is required for divergent
segregation of sister branches and suppresses ectopic bifurcation of axons.
Neuron 33,559
-571.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wang, J., Ma, X., Yang, J. S., Zheng, X., Zugates, C. T., Lee,
C. H. and Lee, T. (2004). Transmembrane/juxtamembrane
domain-dependent Dscam distribution and function during mushroom body neuronal
morphogenesis. Neuron
43,663
-672.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wang, S. S., Tsai, R. Y. and Reed, R. R.
(1997). The characterization of the Olf-1/EBF-like HLH
transcription factor family: implications in olfactory gene regulation and
neuronal development. J. Neurosci.
17,4149
-4158.
Wässle, H. and Boycott, B. B. (1991).
Functional architecture of the mammalian retina. Physiol.
Rev. 71,447
-480.
Wässle, H., Peichl, L. and Boycott, B. B.
(1981). Dendritic territories of cat retinal ganglion cells.
Nature 292,344
-345.[Medline]
Watts, R. J., Hoopfer, E. D. and Luo, L.
(2003). Axon pruning during Drosophila metamorphosis: evidence
for local degeneration and requirement of the ubiquitin-proteasome system.
Neuron 38,871
-885.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wayman, G. A., Impey, S., Marks, D., Saneyoshi, T., Grant, W.
F., Derkach, V. and Soderling, T. R. (2006).
Activity-dependent dendritic arborization mediated by CaM-kinase I activation
and enhanced CREB-dependent transcription of Wnt-2.
Neuron 50,897
-909.[CrossRef][Medline]
Whitford, K. L., Marillat, V., Stein, E., Goodman, C. S.,
Tessier-Lavigne, M., Chédotal, A. and Ghosh, A.
(2002). Regulation of cortical dendrite development by Slit-Robo
interactions. Neuron 33,47
-61.[CrossRef][Medline]
Williams, D. W. and Truman, J. W. (2005).
Cellular mechanisms of dendrite pruning in Drosophila: insights from in vivo
time-lapse of remodeling dendritic arborizing sensory neurons.
Development 132,3631
-3642.
Williams, D. W., Kondo, S., Krzyzanowska, A., Hiromi, Y. and
Truman, J. W. (2006). Local caspase activity directs
engulfment of dendrites during pruning. Nat. Neurosci.
9,1234
-1236.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wojtowicz, W. M., Flanagan, J. J., Millard, S. S., Zipursky, S.
L. and Clemens, J. C. (2004). Alternative splicing of
Drosophila Dscam generates axon guidance receptors that exhibit
isoform-specific homophilic binding. Cell
118,619
-633.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wojtowicz, W. M., Wu, W., Andre, I., Qian, B., Baker, D. and
Zipursky, S. L. (2007). A vast repertoire of Dscam binding
specificities arises from modular interactions of variable Ig domains.
Cell 130,1134
-1145.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wong, R. O. and Ghosh, A. (2002).
Activity-dependent regulation of dendritic growth and patterning.
Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 3,803
-812.[Medline]
Wu, J. I., Lessard, J., Olave, I. A., Qiu, Z., Ghosh, A., Graef,
I. A. and Crabtree, G. R. (2007). Regulation of dendritic
development by neuron-specific chromatin remodeling complexes.
Neuron 56,94
-108.[CrossRef][Medline]
Yamagata, M. and Sanes, J. R. (2008). Dscam and
Sidekick proteins direct lamina-specific synaptic connections in vertebrate
retina. Nature 451,465
-469.[CrossRef][Medline]
Yamakawa, K., Huot, Y. K., Haendelt, M. A., Hubert, R., Chen, X.
N., Lyons, G. E. and Korenberg, J. R. (1998). DSCAM: a novel
member of the immunoglobulin superfamily maps in a Down syndrome region and is
involved in the development of the nervous system. Hum. Mol.
Genet. 7,227
-237.
Ye, B., Petritsch, C., Clark, I. E., Gavis, E. R., Jan, L. Y.
and Jan, Y. N. (2004). Nanos and Pumilio are essential for
dendrite morphogenesis in Drosophila peripheral neurons. Curr.
Biol. 14,314
-321.[CrossRef][Medline]
Ye, B., Zhang, Y., Song, W., Younger, S. H., Jan, L. Y. and Jan,
Y. N. (2007). Growing dendrites and axons differ in their
reliance on the secretory pathway. Cell
130,717
-729.[CrossRef][Medline]
Zhan, X. L., Clemens, J. C., Neves, G., Hattori, D., Flanagan,
J. J., Hummel, T., Vasconcelos, M. L., Chess, A. and Zipursky, S. L.
(2004). Analysis of Dscam diversity in regulating axon guidance
in Drosophila mushroom bodies. Neuron
43,673
-686.[CrossRef][Medline]
Zheng, X., Wang, J., Haerry, T. E., Wu, A. Y., Martin, J.,
O'Connor, M. B., Lee, C. H. and Lee, T. (2003). TGF-beta
signaling activates steroid hormone receptor expression during neuronal
remodeling in the Drosophila brain. Cell
112,303
-315.[CrossRef][Medline]
Zheng, Y., Wildonger, J., Ye, B., Zhang, Y., Kita, A., Younger,
S. H., Zimmerman, S., Jan, L. Y. and Jan, Y. N. (2008).
Dynein is required for polarized dendritic transport and uniform microtubule
orientation in axons. Nat. Cell Biol.
10,1172
-1180.[CrossRef][Medline]
Zhu, H. and Luo, L. (2004). Diverse functions
of N-cadherin in dendritic and axonal terminal arborization of olfactory
projection neurons. Neuron
42, 63-75.[CrossRef][Medline]
Zhu, H., Hummel, T., Clemens, J. C., Berdnik, D., Zipursky, S.
L. and Luo, L. (2006). Dendritic patterning by Dscam and
synaptic partner matching in the Drosophila antennal lobe. Nat.
Neurosci. 9,349
-355.[CrossRef][Medline]
Zhu, S., Lin, S., Kao, C. F., Awasaki, T., Chiang, A. S. and
Lee, T. (2006). Gradients of the Drosophila Chinmo BTB-zinc
finger protein govern neuronal temporal identity. Cell
127,409
-422.[CrossRef][Medline]
Zlatic, M., Landgraf, M. and Bate, M. (2003).
Genetic specification of axonal arbors: atonal regulates robo3 to position
terminal branches in the Drosophila nervous system.
Neuron 37,41
-51.[CrossRef][Medline]
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
C. Mason The Development of Developmental Neuroscience J. Neurosci., October 14, 2009; 29(41): 12735 - 12747. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||