Abstract

This article develops a closed-loop multi-scale model for axon length regulation based on a frequency-dependent negative feedback mechanism. It builds on earlier models by linking molecular motor dynamics to signaling delays that then determine signal oscillation period. The signal oscillation is treated as a front end for a signaling pathway that modulates axonal length. This model is used to demonstrate the feasibility of such a mechanism and is tested against two previously published reports in which experimental manipulations were performed that resulted in axon growth. The model captures these observations and yields an expression for equilibrium axonal length. One major prediction of the model is that increasing motor density in the body of an axon results in axonal growth—this idea has not yet been explored experimentally.

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