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The Journal of Neuroscience, December 15, 2001, 21(24):9678-9689
Synapse-Forming Axons and Recombinant Agrin Induce Microprocess
Formation on Myotubes
Chang-Sub
Uhm1, 3,
Birgit
Neuhuber1,
Brian
Lowe1,
Virginia
Crocker2, and
Mathew P.
Daniels1
1 Laboratory of Biochemical Genetics, National Heart,
Lung, and Blood Institute and 2 Electron Microscopy
Facility, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke,
National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-4036, and
3 Department of Anatomy and Institute of Medical Genetics,
Korea University College of Medicine, Seongbuk-Ku, Seoul, 136-705, Korea
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ABSTRACT |
We examined cell-surface behavior at nerve-muscle contacts during
synaptogenesis in cocultures of rat ventral spinal cord (VSC) neurons
and myotubes. Developing synapses in 1-d-old cocultures were identified
by the presence of axon-induced acetylcholine receptor (AChR)
aggregation. Identified regions were then examined by transmission and
scanning electron microscopy. The myotube surface near contacts with
axons that induced AChR aggregation typically displayed ruffles,
microvilli, and filopodia (microprocesses), indicating motility of the
myotube surface. At some of these contact sites microprocesses were
wrapped around the axon, resulting in the partial or total
"submersion" of the axon within the myotube contours. Sites of
myotube contact with somata and dendrites of the same neurons showed
much less evidence of motility and surface interaction than sites of
contact with axons. Moreover, the distance between opposed membranes of
axons and myotubes was smaller than between dendrites or somata and
myotubes, suggesting stronger adhesion of axons. These results suggest
polarized expression of molecules involved in the induction of
microprocess formation and adhesion in developing VSC neurons. We
therefore tested the ability of agrin, which is preferentially secreted
by axons, to induce microprocess formation in myotubes. Addition of
recombinant C-terminal agrin to culture medium resulted in formation of
microprocesses within 3 hr. Myotubes transfected with full-length rat
agrin constructs displayed numerous filopodia, as revealed by
fluorescence microscopy. The results suggest that the induction of
muscle cell surface motility may be linked to the signaling processes
that trigger the initial formation of the neuromuscular junction.
Key words:
neuromuscular junction; synapse formation; acetylcholine
receptor; cell adhesion; cell motility; neuronal polarity
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INTRODUCTION |
Neuromuscular junction (NMJ)
formation has been widely studied as a model for synaptogenesis. During
this process, nerve and muscle cells exchange signals to induce the
assembly of efficient machinery for synaptic transmission. This
includes presynaptic active zones with clustered synaptic vesicles and
a postsynaptic membrane specialization containing a high concentration
of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) (for review, see Hall and Sanes,
1993 ; Grinnell, 1995 ; Daniels, 1997 ; Sanes and Lichtman, 1999 ).
Molecules and mechanisms involved in the induction of synaptic
differentiation have been identified through the use of nerve-muscle culture systems, especially those using Xenopus and chick
cells, as well as through in vivo studies (Hall and Sanes,
1993 ; Fischbach et al., 1994 ; Kleiman and Reichardt, 1996 ; Sanes and
Lichtman, 1999 ). Most notably, agrin (McMahan, 1990 ) has been
identified as a critical molecule by which the motor neuron induces
postsynaptic differentiation (Gautam et al., 1995 ; Burgess et al.,
1999 ). We developed a mammalian coculture system in which ventral
spinal cord (VSC) neurons are added to cultures containing extensive myotubes and few nonmuscle cells. This system is especially
useful for the study of early mammalian NMJ formation because axons of VSC neurons rapidly induce aggregation of AChRs along the sites of
contact with the myotubes, and these aggregation sites have molecular
and structural specializations similar to those of the developing NMJ
in vivo (Dutton et al., 1995 ; Daniels et al., 2000 ). The
culture system was used to demonstrate that the induction of AChR
aggregation is specific to axons, as opposed to dendrites. This result
suggested that one or more molecules involved in synaptogenesis are
selectively targeted to the surface of motor axons or selectively secreted there (Dutton et al., 1995 ). In addition, it suggested that
morphological aspects of neuron-myotube surface interactions might
show a similar polarity, even before detectable postsynaptic differentiation.
Our initial electron microscopic observations on sites of
neurite-induced AChR aggregation (Dutton et al., 1995 ) suggested an
adhesive interaction between axons and the myotube surface that results
in a partial "engulfment" of the axon. In the present study we
further characterized the VSC neuron-muscle contact after 1 d in
culture by scanning electron microscopy (SCEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). We found that muscle cell surfaces adjacent
to axons of neurons that induce AChR aggregation develop prominent
microvilli, filopodia, and ruffles (microprocesses) indicative of
motile activity and that many of these microprocesses closely contact
the axon. This activity was evoked at much lower levels by dendrites
and cell bodies of the same neurons. Agrin is preferentially secreted
by the axons of motor neurons (Ma et al., 2000 ) and targeted to the
axons of other central neurons (Escher et al., 1996 ; Ferreira, 1999 ).
We found that treatment with recombinant agrin, either by addition to
the medium or by transfection of the myotubes, induced the formation of
microprocesses similarly to axon contact. Our results taken together
suggest the coupling of this muscle cell-surface response to the
signaling involved in synaptogenesis.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cell culture. Rat muscle cell cultures were prepared
essentially as described (Daniels, 1990 ; Dutton et al., 1995 ) with the indicated modifications (Daniels et al., 2000 ). The myoblasts were
selectively detached (~48 hr after plating) from the culture dishes by incubation with a neutral protease (Dispase, Grade II; Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) at 0.025% in Dulbecco's PBS (DPBS), and collected (first harvest). To get cultures with even fewer fibroblasts, we further modified the collection procedure. After the first harvest, the cultures were incubated in fresh culture
medium for 30 min to allow partially detached fibroblasts to reattach
to the culture plates. Loosely attached and newly detached myoblasts
were then dislodged from the surface by gentle tapping of the dishes,
and collected (second harvest). The yield of cells was generally higher
from the second harvest than the first. Cells from the second harvest
or from a 1:1 mixture of the first and second harvest were plated at a
density of 3.75-5 × 104 cells per
13 mm glass coverslip coated with carbon and gelatin. Two days after
plating, the cells were fed with DMEM, 10% horse serum (HS), 1.5 µM tetrodotoxin (TTX; to inhibit myotube
contraction), penicillin-streptomycin (P-S; 100 U/100 µg/ml),
fungizone (2.5 µg/ml), and 10 µM cytosine
arabinoside (to kill dividing cells). Muscle cell cultures used to test
the effects of transfection with agrin-GFP constructs and some of the
cultures used for electron microscopy were prepared similarly, except
that the enrichment of myoblasts was done according to "method 3"
as described (Daniels et al., 2000 ), and the myoblasts were plated at
5 × 105 per 35 mm dish containing
three carbon and gelatin-coated coverslips.
Ventral spinal cord (VSC) neurons used in this study were obtained from
embryonic day 16 (E16) rat fetuses as described (Walton et al.,
1993 ; Dutton et al., 1995 ). Neurons were plated on the muscle cell
cultures 24-48 hr after myoblast plating. The number of neurons per
coverslip was adjusted to 2000-20,000 (usually 2000-5000) to have
isolated neurons in contact with myotubes and minimal fasciculation of
neurites. After incubation for 2-3 hr to allow for adhesion of
neurons, 1.5 ml of culture medium consisting of 95% Eagle's Minimum
Essential Medium (Life Technologies, Rockville MD), 5% HS supplemented
with TTX, P-S, and fungizone as above, was added to the dishes.
AChR labeling and observation of living and fixed cultures.
AChRs were labeled as described previously (Dutton et al., 1995 ), by
incubating cultures with 5 × 10 8
M tetramethylrhodamine-conjugated
-bungarotoxin (TRITC-BTX; Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR), for 1 hr at
37°C before observation. Labeled cultures were loaded into temporary
chambers and were examined in the living state with a Zeiss Axioplan
microscope. The microscope was equipped for fluorescence and
phase-contrast microscopy with a 100 W mercury arc lamp, narrow-band
filter sets, and 63× Plan-Apochromat (N.A. 1.40) and 40×
Plan-Neofluor (N.A. 1.30) phase-contrast objective lenses (Carl Zeiss
Inc., Thornwood, NY). Areas where induced AChR aggregates were
associated with single neurons were located with a Venus low-light
video camera (Carl Zeiss Inc.) and high-resolution images were obtained
with a Hamamatsu C4880 cooled CCD camera (Hamamatsu Photonic Systems, Bridgewater, NJ). These observations were made with incident
illumination reduced to 0.18% of maximum by neutral density filters,
to prevent damage to the cells before fixation for electron microscopy.
An additional series of cocultures to be prepared for SCEM and TEM were
"prefixed" after labeling with TRITC-BTX and before observation. This facilitated the collection of identified neuron-myotube pairs for
further fixation and ultrastructural examination. Prefixation was for
30 min in 4% paraformaldehyde, 4% sucrose, and 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.2. Fixative was
prewarmed to 37°C, and the cultures were allowed to approach room
temperature during fixation. These cultures were observed at routine
levels of incident illumination, and the images were acquired with a
Hamamatsu C4742-95 digital camera (Hamamatsu Photonic Systems)
Soluble agrin treatment. Recombinant C-terminal rat
agrin4,8 (Ferns et al., 1993 ; subscripts refer to
Y and Z site inserts) was prepared from conditioned medium of
COS-7 cells transfected with agrin constructs according to
Forsayeth and Garcia (1994) . The construct, containing the C-terminal
base pairs 4069-7288 of rat agrin with His and Flag tags near the 5'
end, was generously provided by Dr. C. Sigal (National Institute of
Mental Health, Bethesda, MD). Agrin was purified from conditioned
medium by use of Talon IMAC resin (Clontech, Palo Alto, CA) according
to the procedures recommended by Clontech. A Western blot of the
purified agrin using a Flag antibody showed a single band at ~100
kDa, as expected for this construct. To assay the AChR aggregating activity of the preparation, myotube cultures were exposed to dilutions
of purified agrin from 1:100-1:10,000 for 24-48 hr, after which the
AChRs were labeled with TRITC-BTX (see above), fixed, and examined
with the 63× objective. The number of AChR aggregates at least 10 µm
in longest dimension was counted in equivalent areas of duplicate
coverslips for each dilution and control. AChR aggregation activity was
maximal at a dilution of 1:1000 and approximately half-maximal at
1:5000. Additional C-terminal rat agrin4,8 and
C-terminal rat agrin0,0 were generously provided by Dr. Sheridan Swope (Georgetown University Medical School,
Washington, DC). These agrin preparations were in the form of
conditioned medium from transfected COS-7 cells. Both conditioned media
contained 10 nM agrin. Recombinant human
epidermal growth factor (EGF) was obtained from BioSource International
(Camarillo, CA) and was used at 2 ng/ml. Recombinant proteins were
added to the cultures in serum-free DMEM 4 d after plating
myoblasts, at which time myotubes were well formed.
After preparation for SCEM (see below), myotubes were assayed for
microprocess formation as follows. For each datum, 7-12 myotubes of
rather uniform width (6-14 µm) were selected at 240× magnification
(at which microprocesses are not visible), and a segment near the
center was photographed at 5000×. The ends of myotubes and broad,
branching myotubes were avoided because these tended to have more
microprocesses, especially large ruffles, in untreated cultures.
Micrographs were scored for the abundance of microprocesses on an
arbitrary scale of 0-4 (see Results). Each micrograph was scored
independently by three observers who were unaware of the experimental
treatments. If two observers gave the same score, that was recorded, if
not, the median score was recorded. A large set of micrographs that had
been scored in this manner was subjected to point-counting estimation
(Ahere and Dunnill, 1982 ) of the proportion of the myotube surface
covered by microprocesses. The scores of 0-4 corresponded,
respectively, to 4, 8, 17, 24, and 35% of the myotube surface covered
by microprocesses. The abundance of microprocesses on myotube surfaces
in cocultures and control (aneural) cultures was evaluated by the same
0-4 scoring method.
Transfection with rat agrin-GFP constructs. The plasmids
used for transfection of myoblasts in this study were designated agrin4,19,
agrin4,19-GFPemd,
agrin4,0-GFPemd, and GFPemd.
Agrin4,19 and agrin4,0 in
pCMV (Ferns et al., 1992 ) and GFPemd-N1 [F] (Packard Instruments Co.,
Meridan, CT) were used to create the agrin-GFPemd C-terminal fusion
proteins. Agrin4,19-GFPemd was constructed by attaching GFPemd to the 3' end of agrin4,19
through a linker (CATCCG) using PCR. All regions containing PCR
amplified products were verified by sequence analysis.
Agrin4,0-GFPemd was constructed by replacing the
agrin4,0 C terminus (C-terminal portion adjacent to the Z site) with the corresponding C-terminal part of
agrin4,19-GFPemd.
Myoblasts were transfected 5 hr after plating, using the liposomal
reagent FuGENE 6 (Roche, Indianapolis, IN). For each 35 mm dish, 3 µg
of purified DNA (CONCERT High Purity Maxiprep: Life Technologies,
Rockville, MD) and 9 µl of Fugene 6 in 90% DMEM, 10% HS, 10% fetal
calf serum, and P-S and fungizone were added according to the
manufacturer's instructions. After 12 hr, the transfection
mixture was replaced with culture medium (see above). Cultures were
processed for fluorescence microscopy or immunocytochemistry 3-4 d
after transfection.
Muscle cultures were fixed with paraformaldehyde as described for
cocultures. For immunofluorescence, cultures were then washed, permeabilized, blocked, and labeled with antibodies essentially as
described (Dutton et al., 1995 ), except that permeabilization and
blocking were combined in a single incubation without glycine. The
primary antibody was an antiserum to GFP (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR)
diluted 1:5000.
Electron microscopy. Cells in cocultures to be examined by
electron microscopy were selected according to the two following criteria: (1) the axon, soma, and dendrites of the neuron could be
identified with phase-contrast microscopy and were in contact with the
top surface or sides of a myotube (thus accessible for SCEM); (2) no
nearby neurons showed evidence of direct contact or fasciculation with
the neurites in question. Neurons were first identified by
phase-contrast microscopy, and the presence or absence of associated
induced AChR aggregates was determined. Digital images serving to map
identified areas were acquired with MetaMorph (Universal Imaging
Corporation, West Chester, PA) or HiPic (Hamamatsu Photonic Systems)
software, and the areas were marked on the back of the coverslip with a
Leitz diamond marker "objective" (Bunton Instrument Co., Rockville,
MD). For TEM, cultures were fixed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde, 0.08%
tannic acid, and 0.1 M sucrose in 0.12 M sodium cacodylate buffer, pH 7.4, for 1 hr (the
initial 15 min of fixation was without tannic acid). The additional
series of cultures that was prefixed in paraformaldehyde before
observation was fixed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde in 0.12 M sodium cacodylate buffer, pH 7.4, for 1 hr. The
cultures were post-fixed in OsO4, en
bloc-stained with uranyl acetate, and further processed as
described (Olek et al., 1986 ; Dutton et al., 1995 ). Marked regions were
relocated in the embeddings and were sectioned transverse to the course of the neurites. Thin sections were stained with uranyl acetate and
lead citrate.
For SCEM, cultures were fixed with 2.5% glutaraldehyde in 0.12 M sodium cacodylate buffer for 30 min at room temperature, post-fixed with 1% OsO4 for 30 min on ice,
dehydrated with an ethanol series, and air-dried after immersing the
cultures in hexamethyldisilazane twice for 15 min. The cultures were
sputter coated with gold before SCEM observation.
For in vivo observations of developing intercostal muscles,
the thoracic body walls of E14-E17 rat fetuses were fixed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde, 0.12 M sodium cacodylate buffer,
pH 7.4, at 4°C. After 1 hr fixation, the rib cages were further
isolated and left in fixative overnight, then post-fixed in 1%
OsO4, en bloc-stained, and embedded in
Epon by standard procedures. Sections were cut transverse to the
developing ribs and post-stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate.
Measurement of intercellular distance. Transmission electron
micrographs taken from samples with induced AChR aggregation were
randomly selected and enlarged to final magnifications of 26,000 or
62,000×. Points of direct opposition between neurons and myotubes were
marked at regular intervals over the span beginning where the two
membranes converged to be parallel and ending where they finally
diverged. The distances between the opposed membranes were measured at
these marked sites. Sets of micrographs (6-18 in each set) from four
neuron-myotube pairs were extensively examined. In two sets the growth
cone, axon, dendritic stump, soma, and dendrite were all observed. In
total, four axons, four somata, three dendrites, two dendritic stumps,
and two growth cones were observed. At least 200 measurements were
taken from each type of contact.
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RESULTS |
Morphology of VSC neurons associated with nerve-induced
AChR aggregates
Most VSC neurons which had nerve-induced AChR aggregates along an
axon were bipolar in shape. The cell bodies were typically oval with
dendrites on both ends, the axons most often arising from one of the
dendrites (dendritic stump). Dendrites were thicker, shorter, and more
tapered than axons, and often branched, whereas axons were thinner,
more uniform in diameter, and longer than dendrites (Figs.
1-3).
These observations were consistent with the immunocytochemical
identification and morphology of axons and dendrites in low-density
cocultures reported previously (Dutton et al., 1995 ). TEM showed
abundant microtubules and some elements of the smooth endoplasmic
reticulum and clear vesicles in the axons. Abundant polyribosomes were
found in the cell body, dendrites, and dendritic stumps, but not in
axons (Figs. 3, 4). This further supported the identification of these processes as axons or dendrites. The dendritic stump from which an axon arose had a core of microtubules similar to axons (Fig. 4A), unlike the other
dendrites. Some axon segments displayed varicosities or filopodia-like
projections (Fig. 3A) similar to those described by other
investigators (Shimada and Fischman, 1975 ; Frank and Fischbach, 1979 ;
Role et al., 1987 ).

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Figure 1.
Myotube surface structure at a site of contact
with a neuron that induced AChR aggregation in a 24 hr coculture.
(A) Phase contrast image of the neuron-muscle
contact. (B) Distribution of AChRs in the same
field shown by labeling with TRITC-BTX. (C-E)
Scanning electron microscopic images from the same area. The areas
shown in the SCEM images are marked with brackets in
(A). E is an image of the area shown
in (D) taken at a tilt angle of 60°. A bipolar
neuron with denritic processes at both ends of the soma is sitting on
top of a slender myotube. An axon arises from one of the dendrites (the
dendritic stump, arrow in A) at a point near
another neuronal soma that has not extended neurites
(n). Induced AChR aggregation is located along a
segment of the axon (B, segment bracketed on the
right in A). The bright fluorescence near the
dendrite probably indicates a spontaneously formed aggregate on the
bottom and edge of the myotube. The contours of the dendrite and its
growth cone (g), as well as the soma, are
distinct from the myotube surface, which is relatively smooth in this
area (C). In contrast, the myotube surface around
the axon (D) contains abundant wave-like ruffles
(large arrows), finger-like microvilli (small
arrows and inset) and longitudinally extended folds
(between arrowheads in D), some of which contact
or even cover (left-hand end of D and
E) parts of the axon. The relationship between the axon and
the muscle folds and microvilli (small arrows) is clearest
in the image obtained by tilting the specimen
(E). Segments of the axon that are clearly
exposed above the myotube surface are indicated by small
arrowheads in E. Scale bars: A,
B, 10 µm; C-E, 5 µm. Magnification of the
inset is twice that of C-E.
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Figure 2.
Myotube surface structure in areas not associated
with nerve-induced AChR aggregation. The surfaces of myotubes in muscle
cultures without VSC neurons (A) and cocultured
myotubes that were not contacted by neurons (B)
show few, if any microprocesses (arrows). A myotube surface
contacted by a neuron that did not induce AChR aggregation
(C) is similarly smooth, except for adherent
pieces of cellular debris (arrowheads) that were formed from
dividing cells killed by cytosine arabinoside. Scale bars, 5 µm.
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Figure 3.
Interactions between a myotube and
different regions of an axon that induced AChR aggregation in a 24 hr
coculture. A, Phase contrast image of the
neuron-muscle contact. B, Distribution of AChRs
labeled with TRITC-BTX in the same field. C-F,
Transmission electron micrographs taken at sites 1-4, respectively
(small arrows in A). AChRs have formed
microaggregates along the course of the axon, suggesting an early stage
of nerve-induced AChR aggregation. At the most distal (arrow
1 in A) contact site shown (C),
the growth cone (g) shows an intimate
relationship with the myotube surface, with intercellular distances
frequently <10 nm (Fig. 5). A filopodium (long arrow) is in
close contact with the myotube surface, whereas elements resembling
lamellipodia are interwoven with myotube microvilli (small
arrowheads) and a fold in the myotube surface
(asterisk). At a site proximal to the growth cone
(D) and at a more proximal site
(E), the axon (a) is
located above the level of the myotube surface but is contacted or
partially surrounded by microprocesses of the myotube. Small mounds in
the myotube surface with a thickened sarcolemma, typical of an early
stage of AChR aggregation, are seen (small arrows in
D-F). Frequently, in the proximal portion, the axon profile
is located below the level of the myotube surface in a groove or tunnel
formed by the muscle surface processes (F) and
the myotube surface may show a decreased number of microvilli. Scale
bars: A, B, 20 µm; C-F, 0.5 µm.
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Figure 4.
Interactions of the same myotube shown in Figure 3
with the dendritic stump, soma, and dendrite of the neuron that induced
AChR aggregation. The approximate locations of the sections shown in
A-D are indicated by small arrows 5-8,
respectively in Figure 3A. A dendritic stump
(A), containing polyribosomes (examples indicated
by short arrows in A, C, and
D, inset in A) and a central core rich
in microtubules (asterisk, inset in A)
sits on top of the myotube surface and extends a process resembling
those of growth cones. The neuronal soma (B) and
dendrite (C, D) also sit on or above the myotube surface
and, as with the dendritic stump there are relatively few
microprocesses on the adjacent myotube surface. The abundance of
microprocesses shown in D was the most observed in sections
of the dendritic stump, dendrite or soma. A structure resembling a
puncta adherens junction can be seen in B
(arrowhead). The process to the left of the dendrite in
(D) is a dendritic branch. Scale bars, 0.5 µm.
Inset magnification is twice that of the other panels.
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Structure of VSC neuron-induced AChR aggregates in 24 hr cocultures
In 24 hr cocultures, the most frequently observed form of the VSC
neuron-induced AChR aggregates consisted of scattered microaggregates along the course of axons (Fig. 3B), consistent with an
early stage of aggregation. Induced AChR aggregates with characteristic dense swaths of elevated AChR density adjacent to the axons were less
frequently observed than in 48 hr cocultures (Dutton et al., 1995 ). The
sarcolemmal and submembrane specializations seen by TEM in the
neurite-induced AChR aggregates of 48 hr were rarely observed at these
younger contacts. Instead, there were small convex mounds with a
slightly thickened sarcolemma similar to the "microaggregates",
previously described as an early form of AChR aggregation (Fig.
3D-F) (Steinbach, 1981 ; Olek et al., 1983 , 1986 ).
Preferential formation of microprocesses on myotube surfaces
adjacent to contacts with axons that induce AChR aggregation
The surface morphology of myotubes in cocultures and aneural
muscle cultures as seen by SCEM was evaluated both qualitatively and
quantitatively. Quantitative evaluation was done by scoring the
abundance of microprocesses on a scale of 0-4 as described in
Materials and Methods (see also Fig. 6). Table
1 summarizes the quantitative results for
innervated myotubes in cocultures. Regions of contact between myotubes
and VSC neurons that induced AChR aggregation within 24 hr displayed
many microprocesses on the myotube surface near the contacting axons;
the mean score of 18 such contact regions was 2.03 ± 0.24. The
microprocesses we observed included wave-like ruffles and folds,
finger-like microvilli ~0.2 µm in diameter and up to a few
micrometers in length, and filopodia that have a similar diameter to
microvilli but are longer (Fig. 1D,E, Table 1). To
determine whether the formation of microprocesses represented a
response to neuronal contact we also examined myotubes not contacted by
VSC neurons. The surfaces of myotubes in cultures without neurons were
smooth compared with innervated myotubes; the mean score for 28 myotubes was 0.75 ± 0.20 (Fig. 2A).
In cocultures, myotubes whose surfaces were free of VSC neurons or
their processes were also smooth compared with innervated myotubes
(Fig. 2B); the mean score for 12 of these myotubes
was 1.33 ± 0.27. In addition, the mean score for 17 regions of
myotubes beginning ~10 µm from aggregation-inducing neuronal contacts was only 0.35 ± 0.12 (Table 1). These observations
together suggest that the formation of microprocesses near axonal
contacts was induced by the axons.
To determine whether microprocess formation was induced preferentially
by VSC neurons that induced AChR aggregation, we examined surface
morphology in areas contacted by neurons that had not induced AChR
aggregates (Fig. 2C, Table 1). Only 7 of 18 (38%) of these
contacts showed many microprocesses, and the mean score was 1.03 ± 0.28. In contrast, 15 of 18 (83%) of the myotube surfaces contacted
by neurons that had induced AChR aggregates along their axons showed
many microprocesses, and the mean score was 2.03 ± 0.24 (as
described above). The mean scores for aggregation-inducing and
noninducing axon contacts were significantly different (Student's t test; p < 0.02). Because the frequency of
AChR aggregation along axons increases markedly between 24 and 48 hr
(Dutton et al., 1995 ), it is possible that some of the axons without
AChR aggregates would have induced AChR aggregation later. Thus, our
results may underestimate the correlation between the induction of AChR
aggregation and the formation of microprocesses near axons.
We previously reported that the induction of AChR aggregation is a
specific property of the axons of VSC neurons (Dutton et al., 1995 ). To
further investigate the polarization of interactions between neurons
and myotubes, we compared the structural interactions between different
parts of identified neurons with muscle cells. Myotube surfaces near
sites of contact with VSC axons that induced AChR aggregates showed
many microprocesses in 83% of nerve-muscle pairs (above). In
contrast, areas contacting soma and dendrites of the same neurons
showed few microprocesses. The mean scores for 18 regions contacted by
soma and dendrites were only 0.28 ± 0.11 and 0.47 ± 0.20, respectively, and these were significantly different (Student's
t test) from scores at axonal contact regions (p < 0.001) (Figs. 1, 3, 4, Table 1). Only four
of these nerve-muscle pairs (22%) had scores >1 along the dendrites.
These results suggest that one or more molecular signals for the
induction of motile activity of the myotube surface is expressed
predominantly by axons.
Myotube interactions with the axonal growth cone in AChR
aggregate-inducing axons
To investigate the earliest interactions between growing axons and
the myotube surface, we examined the regions of contact with axon
growth cones of VSC neurons that induced AChR aggregation. Generally,
axon-induced AChR aggregation observed after 1 d of coculture
occurred proximal to the growth cone (Fig. 3A,B). Therefore, AChR aggregation at a given site probably occurred subsequent to
contact with the growth cone.
The growth cones of two AChR aggregate-inducing axons observed by phase
contrast and TEM both showed close interactions with the muscle cell
surface (Fig. 3C; see also Fig. 5 below). In one of the two,
the growth cone was composed of a narrow lamellipodium and several
filopodia, which were covered or intermingled with myotube microvilli.
In contrast, a growth cone-like structure extending from the dendritic
stump of the same neuron rested on top of the myotube surface and was
not extensively associated with microvilli or other microprocesses of
the myotube (Fig. 4A). In the second example (data
not shown), a broad axonal growth cone was closely adherent to the
myotube surface, and microprocesses of the myotube surface were found
within 1 µm of the growth cone in 81% of the sections examined.
Extensive coverage of a growth cone by microprocesses of the myotube
such as seen in Figure 3C would probably prevent
identification of the growth cone by SCEM. In 13 of the 18 axons
observed by SCEM that induced AChR aggregation, the growth cone was not
identified. It is likely that these growth cones were covered by
myotube processes. The other five axonal growth cones were not
"submerged" in the myotube surface. One of these growth cones was
contacted and partially overlapped by microprocesses of the myotube
surface (data not shown). The wide variation in the extent of
microprocess formation around axonal growth cones may reflect the rate
of forward movement of the growth cones at the time of fixation and the
time required for microprocess formation by the myotube. In contrast to
axonal growth cones, the three dendritic growth cones seen by SCEM had
wide lamellipodia and sparse filopodial projections that rested on or
above the myotube surface and were seldom associated with
microprocesses on the myotube surface (Fig. 1C). The
dendritic termini of the other 15 neurons examined consisted of blunt
ends rather than growth cones. The myotube surfaces near these termini
were evaluated as part of the dendrite contact region (described
above). The observation of microprocess formation on the myotube
surface at the site of axonal growth cone contact suggests that the
response can occur very shortly after initial contact, and before the
accumulation of AChR.
Axons have closer interactions with myotubes than dendrites
and somata
The degree of adhesion between cell surfaces may be reflected in
the proximity between opposing membranes. TEM observations suggested
that membranes of axons and axonal growth cones were generally in
closer proximity to the opposed myotube membranes than were membranes
of dendrites and somata (Fig. 4). Measurements of the distances between
the opposed myotube membrane and membranes of different neuronal parts
revealed that axons and myotube membranes were significantly closer
together than dendrites and somata. The frequency distributions of
intercellular distances for axons and growth cones were skewed to the
shorter distances relative to dendritic stumps, dendrites and somata
(Fig. 5). The mean intercellular distances were (nm ± SE, with (n) = number of neuron-myotube
contacts assayed): 21.0 ± 0.4 (2) for axon growth cones,
18.8 ± 0.8(4) for axons, 33.8 ± 8.9(2) for dendritic
stumps, 28.5 ± 1.2(4) for somata, and 29.6 ± 3.2(3) for
dendrites. The mean distance for the axons was significantly different
from those of the dendrites and somata (Student's t test,
p < 0.05 and p < 0.01, respectively). We also compared the intercellular distances of the different kinds of
contacts using the pooled measurements from all the assayed cells. By
this analysis, the median intercellular distances for the axonal growth
cone and axons were significantly different from those of dendritic
stumps, somata and dendrites (p < 0.001, Mann-Whitney rank sum test). In addition to the differences in mean
intercellular distance, a striking difference was observed in the
proportion of intermembrane distance measurements <10 nm: 37.1% for
the axon growth cone, 44.0% for axons, 27.7% for dendritic stumps,
19.8% for somata, and 22.6% for dendrites (Fig. 5). These results
together indicate that axons of VSC neurons that induced AChR
aggregation had a greater area of close contact with myotubes than did
dendrites and somata and thus may adhere more tightly to myotubes.

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Figure 5.
Frequency of intercellular distances at sites of
opposition between myotubes and different parts of VSC neurons that had
induced AChR aggregation. The distance between opposed neuron and
myotube membranes was measured in enlargements of transmission electron
micrographs such as the ones shown in Figures 3 and 4 (see Materials
and Methods). The first bar on the left of each
graph represents the percentage of all measurements <10 nm.
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|
SCEM observations of 13 VSC neurons that induced AChR aggregation
revealed that myotube processes had grown to cover a substantial portion of the axons of 11 neurons (Fig. 1D,E).
Overall, 22.3 ± 2.1% of the length of aggregation-inducing axons
were covered by myotube processes such that one or both sides of the
axon could not be seen. In 7 of 11 axons that showed submersion, it was
more pronounced in the halves of the axons closer to the cell body (41.6 ± 5.6% covered) than in the distal halves (19.8 ± 1.7% covered). In addition, submersion was most apparent in axon
segments with adjacent AChR aggregates (Fig. 1D,E),
47.8 ± 5.8% of these segments being submerged. These results
suggest that adhesive cell membrane interactions correlated with the
induction of AChR aggregation may result in progressive submersion of
axons by myotube processes. As illustrated in Figure 3D-F, this
phenomenon was also revealed by TEM observations of 4 VSC neurons that
induced AChR aggregation. The TEM observations revealed close contact
between myotube processes and axons, emphasizing the possible role of
cell-cell adhesion in this submersion. In the example shown, many
microvilli arose from the myotube surface near the distal axon segment,
often making contacts with the sides, and occasionally the "top" of
the axon whereas the number of such microprocesses near the proximal
axon segment was reduced (Fig. 3D-F). The myotube surface contacting the proximal axon segment instead formed a gutter in which the axon
rested. At least one "side" and the "bottom" of the axon usually contacted the wall of the gutter, and some parts of the gutter
were actually closed over by folds to form a tunnel surrounding the
axon (Fig. 3F). Consistent with the SCEM results, the dendritic stump,
soma and dendrite of the 4 neurons examined by TEM were associated with
few microprocesses and were never covered by them (Fig. 4). Thus,
whereas the interaction of VSC axons with myotube microprocesses
resulting in submersion in the myotube contours was variable in degree,
submersion was not seen with dendrites.
Agrin induces microprocess formation by myotubes
The observation that synapse-forming axons of VSC neurons
selectively induce microprocess formation together with our previous observation that agrin is secreted predominantly along these axons (Ma
et al., 2000 ), suggested the possibility that agrin might induce
microprocess formation. To test this, we first examined the surface
morphology of uninnervated myotubes after adding C-terminal rat agrin
to culture medium. Myotubes were exposed to recombinant C-terminal rat
agrins for 3, 6, 12 or 24 hr. Myotubes were examined by SCEM and scored
for the abundance of microprocesses on a scale of 0-4. Examples of the
scoring can be seen in Figure 6.
Agrin4,8, an isoform that is highly active in
AChR aggregation (Ferns et al., 1993 ) induced extensive microprocess
formation. The number of microprocesses compared with untreated
myotubes increased significantly by 3 hr (mean score of 3 experiments
1.93 ± 0.03 vs. 1.05 ± 0.13 for control) and peaked at 6 hr
(mean score of 3 experiments 2.97 ± 0.16; Fig. 6, Table
2). Agrin0,0, is
inactive in AChR aggregation in soluble form. In a second series of
experiments agrin0,0 appeared to induce a small
increase in the number of microprocesses at 6 (1.40 ± 0.25) and
12 (1.60 ± 0.08) hr compared with control myotubes (0.78 ± 0.09 and 1.22 ± 0.20, respectively) which were exposed to medium
conditioned by untransfected COS-7 cells. These values were not
significantly different (Student's t test) from those of
control myotubes. However, because of the variability and the gradual
increase in scores over 24 hr for the control cultures in this series
of experiments (possibly due to activity in COS-7 cell-conditioned
medium), we cannot rule out a modest effect of
agrin0,0 on microprocess formation. We also
tested the effect of recombinant epidermal growth factor (EGF), which
induces microprocess extension and migration in various cell types (for example, Chinkers et al., 1979 ). EGF (2 ng/ml) induced little or no
microprocess formation on myotubes (Fig. 6D, Table 2).

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Figure 6.
Examples of the extent of microprocess formation
observed by SCEM on myotubes treated by the addition of recombinant
C-terminal agrin, recombinant EGF, or no addition to serum-free culture
medium. A, No addition. B,
C-terminal agrin4,8 for 3 hr. C,
C-terminal agrin4,8 for 6 hr. D, EGF
for 12 hr. The myotubes shown in A-D were given
scores of 1, 2, 3 and 1, respectively on a scale of 0-4. Scale bar, 5 µm.
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To further test the effect of agrin on myotube surface structure, we
transfected myoblasts with constructs encoding full-length rat agrin
and rat agrin-GFP fusion proteins. In transfected cell lines, these
constructs generate forms of agrin that are not secreted, but are
associated with the plasma membrane, where they probably exist as type
II transmembrane proteins with the active C terminus on the
extracellular side (Burgess et al., 2000 ; Neumann et al., 2001 ).
Myotubes were examined by fluorescence microscopy 3-4 d after myoblast
transfection. Bright cytoplasmic fluorescence in GFP-transfected
myotubes allowed clear visualization of fine processes resembling
filopodia that extended laterally near the substrate, but these were
observed infrequently, except at the ends of myotubes (Fig.
7A, B). Only 2.8% of GFP-transfected
myotube segments observed with the 40× objective displayed >5
filopodia (mean of 3 experiments, 130 myotube segments). In myotubes
transfected with agrin-GFP or agrin, surface topography was visualized
by fluorescence or immunofluorescence of agrin-GFP or agrin associated
with the cell surface. Transfected myotubes frequently displayed
numerous lateral filopodia as well as filopodia on the dorsal surface
of the myotubes. Quantitation was based on the number of lateral
filopodia because these could be more clearly distinguished than those
on the dorsal surface. The responses to transfection with
agrin4,19-GFP, agrin4,19 and agrin4,0-GFP constructs were similar in
magnitude (Fig. 7C, D); 71.3, 75.6 and 69.4% of transfected myotube
segments displayed many filopodia, respectively (mean of 3 experiments,
n = 114, 78 and 120 myotube segments, respectively). In
contrast, labeling with TRITC-BTX showed that myotubes transfected with
agrin4,19-GFP or agrin4,19
had many AChR aggregates on their dorsal surfaces whereas those
tranfected with agrin4,0-GFP were
indistinguishable from GFP-transfected myotubes (not shown). Similar
results were obtained with agrin-tranfected myotubes whose membranes
were labeled with the lipid membrane probe, DiI (not shown). This
indicates that the use of GFP as a marker did not effect microprocess
formation. However, DiI labeling proved erratic in our muscle cultures
and so was not used for quantitation.

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Figure 7.
Microprocesses on myotubes expressing agrin-GFP or
GFP alone. A, B, In cultures transfected with GFP alone,
filopodia-like microprocesses are readily observed at the ends of
GFP-expressing myotubes by immunofluorescence labeling of GFP
(A) but rarely along the edges
(B). In cultures transfected with
agrin4,19-GFP (C) or
agrin4,0-GFP (D), the majority of
myotubes expressing the fusion proteins displayed many filopodia-like
processes as well as shorter lamellipodia and microvilli
(arrows) along the edges. Microprocesses were observed on
the dorsal surfaces of these myotubes but are not in focus. Scale bar,
20 µm.
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Microprocesses and axon-myotube interactions
in vivo
Our observations of microprocess formation on myotubes and
extensive interactions between the membranes of axons and myotubes in
culture prompted a preliminary examination of developing skeletal muscle tissue for this kind of cellular activity. Therefore we studied
the ultrastructure of the developing intercostal muscles of rat embryos
from E14 to E17, the period when motor axons first contact myotubes and
establish simple, but ultrastucturally identifiable neuromuscular
junctions (Kelly and Zacks, 1969 ). Throughout this period,
microprocesses resembling filopodia or microvilli were readily observed
on myotubes, many of them at sites of interaction between myotubes
(Fig. 8A). This demonstrates that
mammalian myotubes in vivo have the capacity to form
microprocesses after the myoblasts fuse. We observed numerous contacts
between axons or their growth cones and myotubes. For the most part
these contacts resembled the developing NMJs described previously
(Kelly and Zacks, 1969 ). Many of the contacts displayed close
apposition between axonal and myotube membranes, (Kelly and Zacks,
1969 ) and location of the axon or growth cone profile in a depression
of the myotube surface (Fig. 8B). At some of these sites microprocesses
of the myotube were close to the axon or contacted it (Fig. 8B). In
addition to myotube processes, processes of Schwann cells were observed around the contacts (as in Kelly and Zacks, 1969 ). Schwann cells near
myotubes were identified by the similarity of their cytoplasmic constituents to those of the cells that ensheathed bundles of axons in
the intercostal nerves and their branches (not shown). These Schwann
cell processes appeared to interact with the axons at least as closely
and extensively as did the myotube.

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Figure 8.
Muscle microprocesses and contacts between
myotubes and axons in E15 intercostal muscle. A,
Three myotubes (seen in transverse section) extend microprocesses
(arrows) that contact one or more of the other myotubes. All
myotubes were identified by the presence of myofibrils (examples at
arrowheads). B, A myotube is seen in
contact with several large and small axonal profiles
(arrows), some of which may be branches of the same axon.
Most of the axon profiles are in close contact with the myotube
membrane and four of them reside within depressions on either side of
the myotube. A microprocess (arrowhead) extends from the
myotube and is in close contact with two of the smaller axonal
profiles. A putative Schwann cell extends a microprocess (small
arrowheads) into one of the areas of contact between axons and the
myotube. Scale bars, 0.5 µm.
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|
 |
DISCUSSION |
In this study we have described novel, specific interactions
between the myotube surface and axons of VSC neurons that form synapses
with the myotube. SCEM and TEM of identified axonal contacts showed the
formation of microvilli, filopodia, ruffles and folds on the adjacent
surface of the myotube and many of these processes formed intimate
contacts with the axon. This kind of interaction occurred much less
frequently in regions of contact with dendrites and somata or with
axons that had not induced postsynaptic AChR aggregation. Little
microprocess formation was observed on the surface of uncontacted
myotubes. Together, these results suggest that contact with
synaptogenic axons induces formation of microprocesses on the myotube
surface. This is the first direct evidence that microprocess formation
in a postsynaptic cell is induced by contact with the presynaptic cell.
In addition, TEM showed closer contact between the membranes of axons
and myotubes than between dendrites or somata of the same neurons and
myotubes, implying greater adhesion with the axon. Finally, the
formation of microprocesses on the myotube surface was induced by
exposure of myotubes to recombinant agrin, a protein that is required
for neuromuscular synaptogenesis and that is targeted to axons. This
suggests a connection between the signaling processes involved in
synaptogenesis and myotube surface motility.
Adhesive interactions
Our results suggest strong adhesive interactions between axons
that induce AChR aggregation and the myotubes they contact. At
axon-myotube contact sites, the membranes were separated by an
irregular but narrow gap with small regions of apparently direct membrane contact. Our observations of greater areas of close apposition (<10 nm between opposing membranes) at axon-myotube contacts than dendrite- or soma-myotube contacts of the same neurons supports the
idea that axons adhere more strongly to the myotube surface. However,
more direct measurements of the strength of adhesion will be needed to
confirm this. The combination of adhesiveness between axon and myotube
and the motile activity indicated by the presence of microprocesses
could explain the frequently observed wrapping of the axon by the
myotube surface. Wrapping to this degree has not been reported in the
developing rat NMJ in vivo (Kelly and Zacks, 1969 ) or
in vitro (Nakajima et al., 1980 ). This may be attributed to
the presence of Schwann cells or other nonmuscle cell types to which
the axons also adhere, thus tending to pull the axon away from the
myotube surface. Partial or complete surrounding of axons was also
reported in a TEM study of chick myotubes cultured with spinal cord
explants (James and Tresman, 1969 ).
It has been suggested, on the basis of several lines of evidence, that
adhesion between nerve and muscle cells could serve as a signal for the
induction of postsynaptic differentiation (Bloch and Pumplin, 1988 ).
More recently, the role of agrin as a primary signal for postsynaptic
differentiation has been established (reviewed in Sanes and Lichtman,
1999 ). Interestingly, it now appears that agrin interacts with
integrins and integrins modulate the AChR aggregating activity of agrin
(Martin and Sanes, 1997 ) and laminin (Burkin et al., 1998 ). Thus
adhesion molecules may play a direct role in the signal transduction
process leading to postsynaptic differentiation. It remains to be
determined whether adhesion between axon and myotube is directly
involved in triggering AChR aggregation. Nonetheless, the increase in
area of axon-myotube contact resulting from adhesion and myotube
surface motility may enhance the presentation of surface-bound neural
factors such as agrin, neuregulin, heparin-binding growth factors, or
surface-bound proteases to their receptors or substrates, thus
facilitating their putative role in the initiation of NMJ
formation and in its maturation. (McMahan, 1990 ; Peng et al.,
1991 ; Anderson et al., 1991 ; Champaneria et al., 1992 ; Fischbach et
al., 1994 ; Peng et al., 1995 ; Kleiman and Reichardt, 1996 ).
Adhesion between axon and myotube membranes must be mediated by
specific cell-surface molecules. If, as our results suggest, the
innervating axons adhere more strongly to the myotube than somata and
dendrites, there may be a higher concentration of one or more adhesion
molecules on the axon. There is evidence for involvement of N-CAM, L1
or other cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) in nerve-muscle interactions in
developing embryos (Landmesser et al., 1988 ; Rafuse et al., 2000 ) and
in culture (Grumet et al., 1982 ; Rutishauser et al., 1983 ). It will be
important to determine which, if any, adhesion molecules are
preferentially expressed by the axons of developing motor neurons and
whether they are required for synaptogenesis.
Microprocess formation and synaptogenesis
We have shown that microprocesses on the myotube surface are
induced by contact with synapse-forming axons. These surface changes
could be seen as far distally as the vicinity of the growth cone and
its filopodia, suggesting that they might represent a very early stage
of nerve-muscle interaction. This activity may be the earliest
morphological manifestation of the signal transduction process that
triggers synaptic differentiation.
Similar surface activity appears to occur in vivo. In
Xenopus embryos, Kullberg et al. (1977) reported microvilli
on the myofiber surface at the time of nerve-muscle contact formation.
Here we report that in E14 to E17 rat intercostal muscles, processes
resembling microvilli or filopodia extend from the surface of
developing myotubes. Many of these processes appeared to be
involved with interactions between myotubes, but some were
associated with axons that contact myotubes. In addition, profiles of
axons or growth cones were seen to sit within cup-shaped depressions in
the myotube surface. These findings suggest that active remodeling of
myotube surface contours that increases interaction with axons may
occur during the early stage of NMJ formation in vivo. In
the recognition phase of interaction between Drosophila motor neurons
and their target muscle cells, appropriate axons and muscle cells both
extend processes resembling filopodia that contribute to the formation of adherent junctions, and the retention of muscle cell microprocesses appears to be related to axonal contact (Ritzenthaler et al., 2000 ;
Suzuki et al., 2000 ).
An interesting parallel can be drawn between the axon-induced formation
of microprocesses that we have observed on myotubes and the active
extension and retraction of filopodia along dendritic shafts in
developing hippocampal neurons found in vivo and in culture
(Dailey and Smith, 1996 ; Ziv and Smith, 1996 ). This activity is most
prominent during the phase of active synaptogenesis, but its precise
role remains unclear (Ziv and Smith, 1996 ; Fiala et al., 1998 ). Recent
studies on the remodeling of dendrites during development (Threadgill
et al., 1997 ; Ruechoeft et al., 1999 ; Wong et al., 2000 ) suggest that
this activity is mediated by Rho-family small guanosine triphosphatases
(GTPases) and may be dependent on activation of glutamate receptors
(Wong et al., 2000 ).
Thus, the induction of myotube surface motility by synapse-forming
axons is a novel example of motility in the postsynaptic "target"
cell that may contribute to synaptogenesis. Alternatively, it may be
simply a result of shared links in the signal transduction pathways for
postsynaptic differentiation and microprocess formation. Formation of
membrane ruffles and filopodia is one of the earliest structural
changes in many cell types in response to various extracellular factors
(Ridley, 1994 ). Formation of these motile processes involves reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton, mediated by activation of the
small GTPases of the Rho family whose downstream targets directly
affect assembly (reviewed in Ridley, 1994 ; Hall, 1998 ; Ridley, 1999 ).
The AChR aggregating effect of agrin is mediated via the
phosphorylation of a muscle-specific receptor tyrosine kinase, MuSK
(Valenzuela et al., 1995 ; DeChiara et al., 1996 ; Glass et al., 1996 ).
This appears to be dependent on the presence of alternatively spliced
inserts in the "Z" site of the C-terminal domain of agrin (Ferns et
al., 1992 ; Glass et al., 1996 ). Recent evidence suggests that the
downstream activation of Rac and Cdc42, two Rho-family GTPases, plays a
role in this pathway (Weston et al., 2000 ). This may provide an
explanation for our finding that agrin induces microprocess formation
on myotubes. Soluble agrin lacking Z site inserts had, at most, a
modest ability to induce microprocess formation. This would be
consistent with a role for MuSK in the induction of microprocess
formation. However, we also found that expression of a full-length
agrin-GFP lacking an insert in the C-terminal "Z" site was as
effective as expression of agrin-GFP or agrin with a 19 amino acid
insert. In contrast, transfection with the Z0
construct did not increase AChR aggregation over control whereas the
Z19 construct did. Thus, agrin may induce myotube surface motility through MuSK-dependent and independent pathways. It is
possible that the existence of the transfected agrin forms as
transmembrane proteoglycans (Burgess et al., 2000 ; Neumann et al.,
2001 ) is involved in the MuSK independent signaling pathway. In this
regard, it is interesting that overexpression of the transmembrane proteoglycan syndecan-2 in COS-1 and Swiss 3T3 cells results in the
formation of filopodia (Granés et al., 1999 ). A MuSK-independent signaling pathway could play a role in the remodeling of neuronal processes in the developing CNS, where the transmembrane form of agrin
is predominantly expressed (Burgess et al., 2000 ; Neumann et al.,
2001 ).
The current evidence indicates that agrin secreted by the motor neuron
(as opposed to transmembrane agrin) is required for NMJ formation
(Burgess et al., 2000 ). Hence, our results with soluble agrin
indicating a substantially MuSK-dependent microprocess induction may be
more relevant to NMJ formation than the results of transfection of
transmembrane agrin. Whatever the mechanism by which agrin induces
microprocess formation, preferential induction of myotube cell-surface
motility by synapse-forming axons is consistent with the preferential
accumulation of secreted neuronal agrin along these axons in coculture
(Ma et al., 2000 ).
Together, our results suggest a model of early nerve-muscle
interaction in which agrin or other molecules secreted by the motor
axon would, in addition to inducing AChR aggregation, induce the
formation of motile microprocesses on the myotube surface. The adhesive
interaction between these processes and the axon would increase contact
area and thus enhance signaling between the two cells to promote
postsynaptic differentiation. Future studies should test the validity
of this model and further examine the signaling pathways leading to the
remodeling of the myotube surface in response to motor axon contact.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Nov. 7, 2000; revised Sept. 5, 2001; accepted Oct. 3, 2001.
C.-S.U. is supported by the Brain Korea 21 Project of the Ministry of
Education and Human Resources Development, Republic of Korea. We are
grateful to Dr. Chang-Hyun Park for help with scanning electron
microscopy, Drs. Cathy Sigal and Robin Taylor for help in preparing
C-terminal agrin, and Drs. Evelyn Ralston and Carol Torgan for a
critical reading of the manuscript. We also thank Myoung-Soon Cho,
Ashley Thuy-Doan, Matthew Rivellese, Eun Kyung Park, and Isaac
Bernstein-Hanley for technical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Mathew P. Daniels, Laboratory
of Cell Biology, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National
Institutes of Health, 50 South Drive, Room 3318, MSC 8017, Bethesda, MD
20892-8017. E-mail: danielsm{at}nhlbi.nih.gov.
 |
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