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Cortactin-binding protein 2 increases microtubule stability and regulates dendritic arborization

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Neurons are characterized by subcellular compartments such as axons, dendrites and synapses that have highly specialized morphologies and biochemical specificities. Cortactin binding protein 2 (CTTNBP2), a neuron-specific F-actin regulator, has been shown to play a role in the regulation of dendritic spine formation and maintenance. Here, we show that in addition to F-actin, CTTNBP2 also associates with microtubules before mature dendritic spines formed. The association of CTTNBP2 and microtubules induced the formation of microtubule bundles. Although the middle (Mid) region of CTTNBP2 was sufficient for association with microtubules, for microtubule bundling, the N-terminal region containing the coiled coil motifs (NCC) mediating the dimerization or oligomerization of CTTNBP2 is also required. Our study indicates that CTTNBP2 proteins form a dimer or oligomer and bring multiple microtubule filaments together to form bundles. In cultured hippocampal neurons, knockdown of CTTNBP2 or expression of the Mid or NCC domain alone reduced the acetylation levels of microtubules and impaired dendritic arborization. The study suggests that CTTNBP2 influences both the F-actin and microtubule cytoskeletons and regulates dendritic spine formation and dendritic arborization.
CTTNBP2 shows different subcellular distributions in premature and mature cultured hippocampal neurons. (A) CTTNBP2 (BP2) was expressed in cultured hippocampal neurons at 1, 7, 14 and 18 days in vitro (DIV). a-tubulin was used as a loading control. Note that mature spines typically form at 18 DIV in our system. (B,C) Distribution of endogenous CTTNBP2, F-actin and microtubules in cultured hippocampal neurons at 14 and 18 DIV. (B) Confocal and structured illumination microscopy (SIM) images of endogenous CTTNBP2, a-tubulin and F-actin (viewed with phalloidin) at 14 DIV. 3D-SIM, image of SIM after 3D reconstruction with Imaris software. (C) Direct comparison of neurons at 14 and 18 DIV. The same cells were analyzed using both confocal and SIM imaging. In B and C, the confocal images revealed whether the proteins were colocalized; the SIM-3D images revealed the direct interaction between different proteins. The 3D images in the lowest panel of C are the enlargements corresponding to the insets in SIM single-plane images. CTTNBP2 had a closer interaction with microtubules at 14 DIV and was colocalized with F-actin at 18 DIV. (D) Dendritic spine distribution of endogenous CTTNBP2 at 14, 18 and 20 DIV. The yellow lines outline the morphology of dendritic shafts and spines. (E) Quantification of the CTTNBP2 protein levels in dendritic shafts and spines at 14, 18 and 20 DIV. Data represent mean6s.e.m. *P,0.05; ***P,0.001; ns, not significant. Scale bars: 3 mm (B), 5 mm (C, upper panels), 1 mm (C, lower panel), 5 mm (D).
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