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Reactive Oxygen Species Mediate Activity-Regulated Dendritic Plasticity Through NADPH Oxidase and Aquaporin Regulation.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Dhawan, Serene 
Myers, Philip 
Bailey, David MD 
Ostrovsky, Aaron D 
Evers, Jan Felix 

Abstract

Neurons utilize plasticity of dendritic arbors as part of a larger suite of adaptive plasticity mechanisms. This explicitly manifests with motoneurons in the Drosophila embryo and larva, where dendritic arbors are exclusively postsynaptic and are used as homeostatic devices, compensating for changes in synaptic input through adapting their growth and connectivity. We recently identified reactive oxygen species (ROS) as novel plasticity signals instrumental in this form of dendritic adjustment. ROS correlate with levels of neuronal activity and negatively regulate dendritic arbor size. Here, we investigated NADPH oxidases as potential sources of such activity-regulated ROS and implicate Dual Oxidase (but not Nox), which generates hydrogen peroxide extracellularly. We further show that the aquaporins Bib and Drip, but not Prip, are required for activity-regulated ROS-mediated adjustments of dendritic arbor size in motoneurons. These results suggest a model whereby neuronal activity leads to activation of the NADPH oxidase Dual Oxidase, which generates hydrogen peroxide at the extracellular face; aquaporins might then act as conduits that are necessary for these extracellular ROS to be channeled back into the cell where they negatively regulate dendritic arbor size.

Description

Keywords

Drosophila, NADPH oxidases, aquaporins, dendrites, plasticity, reactive oxygen species

Journal Title

Front Cell Neurosci

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1662-5102
1662-5102

Volume Title

15

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (079204/Z/06/Z)
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/R016666/1)
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council to M.L. (BB/R016666/1) DFG to J.F. E. (EV198/1-1) The work benefited from the Imaging Facility, Department of Zoology, supported by Matthew Wayland and funds from a Wellcome Trust Equipment Grant (WT079204) with contributions by the Sir Isaac Newton Trust in Cambridge, including Research Grant (18.07ii(c)).