Abstract

BackgroundAxon pathfinding is controlled by guidance cues that elicit specific attractive or repulsive responses in growth cones. It has now become clear that some cues such as Netrin-1 can trigger either attraction or repulsion in a context-dependent manner. In particular, it was recently found that the repellent Slit1 enables the attractive response of rostral thalamic axons to Netrin-1. This finding raised the intriguing possibility that Netrin-1 and Slit1, two essential guidance cues, may act more generally in an unexpected combinatorial manner to orient specific axonal populations. To address this major issue, we have used an innovative microfluidic device compatible not only with dissociated neuronal cultures but also with explant cultures to systematically and quantitatively characterize the combinatorial activity of Slit1 and Netrin-1 on rostral thalamic axons as well as on hippocampal neurons.ResultsWe found that on rostral thalamic axons, only a subthreshold concentration of the repellent Slit1 triggered an attractive response to a gradient of Netrin-1. On hippocampal neurons, we similarly found that Slit1 alone is repulsive and a subthreshold concentration of Slit1 triggered a potent attractive or repulsive behavioral response to a gradient of Netrin-1, depending on the nature of the substrate.ConclusionsOur study reveals that at subthreshold repulsive levels, Slit1 acts as a potent promoter of both Netrin-1 attractive and repulsive activities on distinct neuronal cell types, thereby opening novel perspectives on the role of combinations of cues in brain wiring.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13064-015-0036-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Axon pathfinding is controlled by guidance cues that elicit specific attractive or repulsive responses in growth cones

  • An in vitro microfluidic guidance assay for axons To investigate the combinatorial effects triggered by guidance cues, we used a microfluidic device similar to those described in [9] made of two fluidic channels separated by a gap of 200 μm (Figures 1A,B,C and 2A)

  • Using a shear-free microfluidic assay, we quantitatively describe the combinatorial effect of Netrin-1 and Slit1 on axon guidance

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Axon pathfinding is controlled by guidance cues that elicit specific attractive or repulsive responses in growth cones. It was recently found that the repellent Slit enables the attractive response of rostral thalamic axons to Netrin-1 This finding raised the intriguing possibility that Netrin-1 and Slit, two essential guidance cues, may act more generally in an unexpected combinatorial manner to orient specific axonal populations. To address this major issue, we have used an innovative microfluidic device compatible with dissociated neuronal cultures and with explant cultures to systematically and quantitatively characterize the combinatorial activity of Slit and Netrin-1 on rostral thalamic axons as well as on hippocampal neurons.

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call