Actin Remodeling and Polymerization Forces Control Dendritic Spine Morphology
Karsten Miermans, Remy Kusters, Casper Hoogenraad, Cornelis Storm

TL;DR
This paper presents a quantitative model demonstrating how actin cytoskeleton dynamics drive the formation and maturation of dendritic spines, crucial for neuronal plasticity and connectivity.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, model-based framework that elucidates the role of actin remodeling and forces in spine shape transitions, validated with realistic parameters.
Findings
Actin forces propel early spine formation.
Remodeling of branched and bundled actin shapes mature spines.
Model highlights factors stabilizing spine morphology.
Abstract
Dendritic spines are small membranous structures that protrude from the neuronal dendrite. Each spine contains a synaptic contact site that may connect its parent dendrite to the axons of neighboring neurons. Dendritic spines are markedly distinct in shape and size, and certain types of stimulation prompt spines to evolve, in fairly predictable fashion, from thin nascent morphologies to the mushroom-like shapes associated with mature spines. This striking progression is coincident with the (re)configuration of the neuronal network during early development, learning and memory formation, and has been conjectured to be part of the machinery that encodes these processes at the scale of individual neuronal connections. It is well established that the structural plasticity of spines is strongly dependent upon the actin cytoskeleton inside the spine. A general framework that details the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCellular Mechanics and Interactions · Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications · Advanced Fluorescence Microscopy Techniques
