Point contact-restricted cAMP signaling controls ephrin-A5-induced axon repulsion

  • Johann Bécret
  • , Claudia Gomez-Bravo
  • , Camille Michaud
  • , Ahlem Assali
  • , Naïg A.L. Chenais
  • , Izeta Kankadze
  • , Fiona Roche
  • , Sandrine Couvet
  • , Coralie Fassier
  • , Xavier Nicol

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Signal transduction downstream of axon guidance molecules is essential for steering developing axons. Second messengers including cAMP are key molecules shared by a multitude of signaling pathways and are required for a wide range of cellular processes including axon pathfinding. Yet, how these signaling molecules achieve specificity for each of their downstream pathways remains elusive. Subcellular compartmentation has emerged as a flexible strategy to reach such a specificity. Here, we show that point contact-restricted cAMP signals control ephrin-A5-evoked axon repulsion in vitro by modulating focal adhesion kinase (FAK; also known as PTK2) phosphorylation and the assembly and disassembly rate of point contacts. Consistent with this, preventing point contact-specific cAMP signals in developing retinal ganglion cells in vivo alters the refinement of their terminal axonal arbor in the brain. Altogether, our study identifies point contacts as a compartment containing a local cAMP signal required for ephrin-A5-dependent axon guidance and highlights the crucial role of such subcellularly restricted second messenger signals in the wiring of neuronal circuits.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere263480
JournalJournal of Cell Science
Volume138
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2025

Keywords

  • Axon guidance
  • Ephrin
  • Focal adhesion kinase
  • Growth cone
  • Point contacts
  • Subcellular compartmentation

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