Abstract

High concentration of cytoskeletal filaments, organelles, and proteins along with the space constraints due to the axon’s narrow geometry lead inevitably to intracellular physical crowding along the axon of a neuron. Local cargo movement is essential for maintaining steady cargo transport in the axon, and this may be impeded by physical crowding. Molecular motors that mediate active transport share movement mechanisms that allow them to bypass physical crowding present on microtubule tracks. Many neurodegenerative diseases, irrespective of how they are initiated, show increased physical crowding owing to the greater number of stalled organelles and structural changes associated with the cytoskeleton. Increased physical crowding may be a significant factor in slowing cargo transport to synapses, contributing to disease progression and culminating in the dying back of the neuronal process. This review explores the idea that physical crowding can impede cargo movement along the neuronal process. We examine the sources of physical crowding and strategies used by molecular motors that might enable cargo to circumvent physically crowded locations. Finally, we describe sub-cellular changes in neurodegenerative diseases that may alter physical crowding and discuss the implications of such changes on cargo movement.

Highlights

  • Neurons are amongst the longest cells in most organisms, with lengths up to 1 m in humans (Fletcher and Theriot, 2004)

  • A dense cytoskeletal network, pre-existing intracellular organelles, and a high concentration of proteins imply that the entire cellular volume in a given region is not always accessible to soluble molecules or organelles that move into a region

  • Increased physical crowding by proteins, cytoskeletal polymers, and stalled membranous organelles in neurodegenerative diseases can all contribute to reducing cargo movement, thereby exacerbating the progression of neurodegenerative phenotypes

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Summary

Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience

High concentration of cytoskeletal filaments, organelles, and proteins along with the space constraints due to the axon’s narrow geometry lead inevitably to intracellular physical crowding along the axon of a neuron. Local cargo movement is essential for maintaining steady cargo transport in the axon, and this may be impeded by physical crowding. Molecular motors that mediate active transport share movement mechanisms that allow them to bypass physical crowding present on microtubule tracks. Irrespective of how they are initiated, show increased physical crowding owing to the greater number of stalled organelles and structural changes associated with the cytoskeleton. Increased physical crowding may be a significant factor in slowing cargo transport to synapses, contributing to disease progression and culminating in the dying back of the neuronal process. This review explores the idea that physical crowding can impede cargo movement along the neuronal process.

INTRODUCTION
PHYSICAL BARRIERS TO DIFFUSIVE AND ACTIVE CARGO MOVEMENT
Crowding Effects on Diffusion
STRATEGIES FOR BYPASSING CROWDING DEPENDING ON THE TYPE OF NEURONAL CARGO
Strategies for Small Molecules
EFFECTS OF PHYSICAL CROWDING IN NEURODEGENERATION
Crowding in Neurodegenerative Diseases
Crowding in Brain Injury and Demyelination
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