Abstract

Mechanical events and alterations in neuronal morphology that accompany neuronal activity have been observed for decades. However, no clear neurophysiological role, nor an agreed molecular mechanism relating these events to the electrochemical process, has been found. Here we hypothesized that intense, yet physiological, electrical activity in neurons triggers cytoskeletal depolymerization. We excited the sciatic nerve of anesthetized mice with repetitive electric pulses (5, 10, and 100 Hz) for 1 and 2 min and immediately fixed the excised nerves. We then scanned the excised nerves with high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, and quantified cytoskeletal changes in the resulting micrographs. We demonstrate that excitation with a stimulation frequency that is within the physiological regime is accompanied by a significant reduction in the density of cytoskeletal proteins relative to the baseline values recorded in control nerves. After 10 Hz stimulation with durations of 1 and 2 min, neurofilaments density dropped to 55.8 and 51.1% of the baseline median values, respectively. In the same experiments, microtubules density dropped to 23.7 and 38.5% of the baseline median values, respectively. These changes were also accompanied by a reduction in the cytoskeleton-to-cytoplasm contrast that we attribute to the presence of depolymerized electron-dense molecules in the lumen. Thus, we demonstrate with an in vivo model a link between electrical activity and immediate cytoskeleton rearrangement at the nano-scale. We suggest that this cytoskeletal plasticity reduces cellular stiffness and allows cellular homeostasis, maintenance of neuronal morphology and that it facilitates in later stages growth of the neuronal projections.

Highlights

  • Neuronal electrical activity is a cascade of biochemical events driven by the passive influx and efflux of ions through voltage-gated channels (Hodgkin and Huxley, 1952)

  • We further suggest that this cleavage process is linked in a way that has never been related before to electrical activity

  • Action potentials are accompanied by an elevation in free calcium levels, both in the nerve cells and in their projections (Callewaert et al, 1996; Jia et al, 2011; Dana et al, 2019)

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Summary

Introduction

Neuronal electrical activity is a cascade of biochemical events driven by the passive influx and efflux of ions through voltage-gated channels (Hodgkin and Huxley, 1952). A physical model of propagation of Neuronal Activity Induces Cytoskeletal Changes mechanical solitons was proposed by Heimburg and Jackson (2005) They describe how an action potential may lead to a phase transition of the lipid membrane, that reflects non-linear changes in multiple mechanical and thermodynamic properties (Heimburg and Jackson, 2005), including those described by Iwasa et al (1980) and Tasaki et al (1989). This phase transition propagates similar to an action potential, without being dispersed (soliton). The molecular mechanisms leading to these events are yet to be resolved, and so is their physiological role

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