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Segregation of axial motor and sensory pathways via heterotypic trans-axonal signaling
ISSN
0036-8075
Date Issued
2008
Author(s)
Gallarda, Benjamin W.
Bonanomi, Dario
Mueller, Daniel
Brown, Arthur
Alaynick, William A.
Andrews, Shane E.
Lemke, Greg
Pfaff, Samuel L.
DOI
10.1126/science.1153758
Abstract
Execution of motor behaviors relies on circuitries effectively integrating immediate sensory feedback to efferent pathways controlling muscle activity. It remains unclear how, during neuromuscular circuit assembly, sensory and motor projections become incorporated into tightly coordinated, yet functionally separate pathways. We report that, within axial nerves, establishment of discrete afferent and efferent pathways depends on coordinate signaling between coextending sensory and motor projections. These heterotypic axon-axon interactions require motor axonal EphA3/EphA4 receptor tyrosine kinases activated by cognate sensory axonal ephrin-A ligands. Genetic elimination of trans-axonal ephrin-A -> EphA signaling in mice triggers drastic motor-sensory miswiring, culminating in functional efferents within proximal afferent pathways. Effective assembly of a key circuit underlying motor behaviors thus critically depends on trans-axonal signaling interactions resolving motor and sensory projections into discrete pathways.