Abstract

Membranous compartments of neurons such as axons, dendrites and modified primary cilia are defining features of neuronal phenotype. This is unlike organelles deep to the plasma membrane, which are for the most part generic and not related directly to morphological, neurochemical or functional specializations. However, here we use multi-label immunohistochemistry combined with confocal and electron microscopy to identify a very large (∼6 microns in diameter), entirely intracellular neuronal organelle which occurs singly in a ubiquitous but neurochemically distinct and morphologically simple subset of sympathetic ganglion neurons. Although usually toroidal, it also occurs as twists or rods depending on its intracellular position: tori are most often perinuclear whereas rods are often found in axons. These ‘loukoumasomes’ (doughnut-like bodies) bind a monoclonal antibody raised against beta-III-tubulin (SDL.3D10), although their inability to bind other beta-III-tubulin monoclonal antibodies indicate that the responsible antigen is not known. Position-morphology relationships within neurons and their expression of non-muscle heavy chain myosin suggest a dynamic structure. They associate with nematosomes, enigmatic nucleolus-like organelles present in many neural and non-neural tissues, which we now show to be composed of filamentous actin. Loukoumasomes also separately interact with mother centrioles forming the basal body of primary cilia. They express gamma tubulin, a microtubule nucleator which localizes to non-neuronal centrosomes, and cenexin, a mother centriole-associated protein required for ciliogenesis. These data reveal a hitherto undescribed organelle, and depict it as an intracellular transport machine, shuttling material between the primary cilium, the nematosome, and the axon.

Highlights

  • Organelles are subcellular compartments or macromolecular complexes with distinct structures and functions [1]

  • A monoclonal antibody raised against neuron-specific bIIItubulin revealed a large (6.0260.07 mm diameter, n = 222) intensely-staining perinuclear toroidal structure occurring singly in adult rat sympathetic ganglia (Fig. 1A)

  • A survey of the central and peripheral nervous systems indicated that these organelles are unique to peripheral autonomic ganglia, including pelvic, hypogastric, lumbar sympathetic, mesenteric, stellate and superior cervical ganglia, as well as in neurons embedded within the adrenal medulla

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Summary

Introduction

Organelles are subcellular compartments or macromolecular complexes with distinct structures and functions [1]. As some of the most architecturally-complex cells, neurons contain some highly-specialized organelles. An obvious example is the photondetecting modified primary cilium of retinal photoreceptors. Another neuron-specific membranous organelle is the dendritic lamellar body, putatively related to dendrodendritic gap junctions in the olive [2]. One of several organelles lacking a limiting membrane is the nematosome, a nucleolus-like cytoplasmic inclusion of unknown composition and function found in all rat noradrenergic sympathetic ganglion neurons [3], and in many other neural and embryonic tissues of various species [4]. Other nemastosome-like inclusions (botrysomes or stigmoid bodies) contain proteins associated with synaptic plasticity and neurite outgrowth [5,6,7]

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