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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 6, 2003, 23(18):7129-7142
Previous Article | Next Article 
Activity-Regulated Dynamic Behavior of Early Dendritic Protrusions: Evidence for Different Types of Dendritic Filopodia
Carlos Portera-Cailliau,
David T. Pan, and
Rafael Yuste
Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia University, New York, New
York 10027
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Abstract
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Dendritic filopodia are long and thin protrusions that occur predominantly
during early development of the mammalian CNS. The function of dendritic
filopodia is unknown, but they could serve to form early synapses, to generate
spines, or to regulate dendritic branching and growth. We used two-photon
imaging to characterize the motile behavior of dendritic protrusions during
early postnatal development (P2-P12) in pyramidal neurons from acute slices of
mouse neocortex. Dendritic protrusions in immature neurons are highly dynamic,
and this motility is actin based. Motility and turnover of these early
protrusions decreases throughout development, mirroring an increase in their
average lifetime and density. Interestingly, density, motility, and length of
filopodia are greater in dendritic growth cones than in dendritic shafts.
These growth cones disappear after P5. Blocking synaptic transmission globally
using TTX or calcium-free solutions led to a 40-120% increase in the density
and length of dendritic filopodia in shafts but not in growth cones. Moreover,
blocking ionotropic glutamate receptors resulted in an 35% decrease in
the density and turnover of shaft filopodia, whereas focal glutamate
application led to a 75% increase in the length of shaft filopodia, but
neither manipulation affected growth cone filopodia. Our results support the
existence of two populations of filopodia, in growth cones and shafts, which
are differentially regulated by neuronal activity. We propose that filopodia
in dendritic growth cones are involved in dendritic growth and branching in an
activity-independent manner, whereas shaft filopodia are responsible for
activity-dependent synaptogenesis and, in some cases, may become dendritic
spines.
Key words: two-photon; cortex; spine; motility; glutamate; synaptogenesis
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Introduction
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Spines were first observed by Ramón y Cajal
(1888 ), who described them as
small thorny protrusions on the surface of dendrites of cerebellar Purkinje
neurons. He proposed that these spines were the sites of axo-dendritic contact
and, therefore, crucial to synaptic transmission
(Ramón y Cajal, 1891 ).
In recent years, a virtual explosion in our knowledge about spines has taken
place, because of the development of new imaging techniques. In particular,
time-lapse imaging of living neurons has demonstrated that spines are very
motile and pleomorphic, changing from one morphology to another over a time
scale of minutes (Fischer et al.,
1998 ; Dunaevsky et al.,
1999 ; Lendvai et al.,
2000 ). Because of their dynamism, spines appear to exhibit a
spectrum of morphologies, so the previously rigid classification systems for
spines (Peters and Kaiserman-Abramof,
1970 ) likely refer to different states in a structurally dynamic
system (Parnass et al.,
2000 ).
Spines are not the only appendages that protrude from dendrites. During
development, dendrites are first decorated by filopodia
(Ramón y Cajal, 1934 ;
Morest, 1969 ;
Purpura, 1975 ;
Lund et al., 1977 ;
Vaughn, 1989 ;
Jontes and Smith, 2000 ;
Portera-Cailliau and Yuste,
2001 ). Because of gross similarities between filopodia and spines,
information on filopodia has been inferred from existing knowledge about
spines. Unfortunately, filopodia are still surprisingly poorly characterized,
perhaps because of the difficulty in staining embryonic tissue by conventional
histological techniques, as already pointed out by Ramón y Cajal
(1899 ). Many aspects of the
behavior and function of dendritic filopodia remain a mystery. For example,
controversy exists as to whether or not filopodia give rise to spines. It is
tempting to consider filopodia as precursors to spines because they both
protrude from dendrite shafts and because their expression during development
precedes that of spines. On the basis of this temporal sequence, it has been
proposed that filopodia metamorphose into spines
(Dailey and Smith, 1996 ;
Ziv and Smith, 1996 ). However,
the more elongated shape of dendritic filopodia, reminiscent of that of axonal
filopodia, suggests instead an exploratory role. Given that filopodia can
occur transiently in certain types of nonspiny neurons
(Lund et al., 1977 ;
Difiglia et al., 1980 ;
Mason, 1983 ;
Dvergsten et al., 1986 ;
Ulfhake and Cullheim, 1988 ;
Wong et al., 1992 ;
Linke et al., 1994 ), this
probing function of filopodia seems to be unrelated to spinogenesis. Because
synapses can be found on dendritic filopodia
(Vaughn et al., 1974 ;
Saito et al., 1997 ;
Fiala et al., 1998 ), these
protrusions might contact axons to establish early synapses, independently of
the eventual formation of spines (Fiala et
al., 1998 ). Another potential role for dendritic filopodia is in
guiding the growth of dendrites (Vaughn,
1989 ; Portera-Cailliau and
Yuste, 2001 ), a function analogous to that of axonal growth cone
filopodia. The goal of the present study was to begin to test these hypotheses
by investigating the behavior of dendritic filopodia in living neurons.
We have studied the dynamics of dendritic filopodia of pyramidal neurons in
acute slices using two-photon time-lapse movies with 30-sec time resolution.
Our studies reveal five findings and support the notion that there exist two
populations of filopodia: (1) dendritic filopodia are highly motile, in an
actin-dependent manner, over a time scale of seconds, and behave differently
than axonal filopodia; (2) dendritic protrusions are developmentally
regulated: they become shorter and more densely packed, and their motility
decreases as their lifetimes increase throughout the first 2 weeks of
postnatal development; (3) dendritic growth cone filopodia are longer and have
shorter lifetimes and greater motility than shaft filopodia; (4) dendritic
shaft filopodia, but not growth cone filopodia, are regulated by neuronal
activity along a continuum of dendritic protrusions; and (5) shaft filopodia,
but not growth cone filopodia, elongate in response to focal glutamate
application. We propose that these different populations of filopodia
implement different functions in neuronal development.
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Materials and Methods
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Acute slices. Timed-pregnant female C57/B6J mice (Taconic Farms,
Germantown, NY) or GFP-M transgenic mice
(Feng et al., 2000 ) were kept
in our animal housing facility at 12/12 hr light/dark cycles at 22°C. Pups
at different ages [postnatal day (P) 0 through P12] were anesthetized by
hypothermia (younger animals) or by intraperitoneal injection of
ketamine-xylazine (older animals) and decapitated. The brains were quickly
removed and transferred to ice-cold artificial CSF (ACSF) containing (in
mM): 126 NaCl, 3 KCl, 3 MgSO4, 1.14
NaH2PO4, 1 CaCl2, 26 NaHCO3, and
10 dextrose, bubbled with 95% O2/5% CO2 to a final pH of
7.4. Acute coronal brain slices (300 µm) that included primary visual or
somatosensory cortices were obtained using a vibratome (VT1000S; Leica,
Bannockburn, IL). The slices were then incubated at 37°C for 15-30 min.
Because mature neurons can have alterations in dendritic spines related to
slicing, we left slices in the same ACSF at room temperature for at least 60
min before imaging, to allow dendrites to equilibrate after slicing
(Kirov et al., 1999 ).
Intracellular labeling of neurons with Alexa-488. Slices were
placed on a chamber maintained at 35-37°C on the stage of an upright
Olympus BX50WI microscope (Olympus, Melville, NY). Slices were submerged in
ACSF containing (in mM): 126 NaCl, 3 KCl, 2 MgSO4, 1.14
NaH2PO4, 2 CaCl2, 26 NaHCO3, and
10 dextrose, perfused at a rate of 2-4 ml/min, and bubbled with 95%
O2/5% CO2. Layer 5 pyramidal neurons were identified
using differential interference contrast optics with a 60x [0.9
numerical aperture (NA)] water immersion objective (Olympus). Cells were
patched for 1-3 min, and then the pipette was removed gently. Recordings were
performed with a Dagan amplifier (BVC-700A; Dagan Instruments, Minneapolis,
MN), and the data were filtered at 1 kHz and digitized at 10 kHz with a
MacAdios A/D board using Superscope (GW Instruments) run on a Power PC
(Macintosh). Liquid junction potentials and series resistances were manually
compensated for standard patch pipettes ( 7-16 M tip resistance)
pulled on a Brown/Flaming micro-electrode puller (P-97; Sutter Instruments,
Novato, CA). Pipettes were filled with an intracellular solution containing
(in mM): 5 NaCl, 20 KCL, 10 HEPES, 125 KMeSO4,
2.5Mg-ATP, 0.3 Na-GTP, and 2 Alexa-488 (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR). Neurons
were recorded using whole-cell patch-clamp technique in current clamp
configuration.
Pharmacology and PicoSpritzer delivery of glutamate. Cytochalasin
D (0.5 µg/ml), CNQX (20 µM), D-APV (40
µM), and TTX (1 µM) were added to the perfused
ACSF in selected experiments (all four chemicals were from Sigma, St. Louis,
MO). Imaging was started 5-30 min after bath application of the drugs. For
calcium-free experiments, ACSF was made with no added calcium, and, in its
place, 2 mM MgCl2 was added. For washout experiments,
dendrites were imaged 10-45 min after changing to normal ACSF. For glutamate
puffing experiments, a glass electrode filled with 20 µM to 1
mM glutamate (dissolved in ACSF and containing 0.05 mM
Alexa-488 to visualize the pipette while imaging) was lowered into the slice
and placed within 10-50 µm from the dendrite of interest. The electrode was
connected to a PicoSpritzer III (Parker Hannifin Corporation, Fairfield, NJ),
which delivered brief air puffs (50-200 msec, at 5-20 psi) that propelled the
glutamate onto the slice. Generally, the dendrite was imaged for 10 frames
(every 60 sec) before the first puff of glutamate and then for an additional
20-30 frames during which two to three additional puffs were delivered.
Imaging, image processing, and analysis. Images were collected
with a 60x (0.9 NA) water immersion objective (Olympus) using a
custom-built two-photon laser-scanning microscope
(Majewska et al., 2000b ;
Nikolenko et al., 2003 ),
consisting of a modified FLUOVIEW (Olympus) confocal microscope (controlled
with FLUOVIEW software) and a Ti/ sapphire laser providing 720- to 850-nm 130
fs pulses at 75 MHz (Mira; Coherent Radiation, Palo Alto, CA) pumped by a
solid-state source (Verdi; Coherent Radiation). While imaging at 800 nm, the
emitted fluorescence was detected by using an internal photomultiplier tube
(HC125-02; Hamamatsu, Ichinoko, Japan) in whole-area detection mode. Images of
dendritic protrusions were acquired at the high digital zoom (7x to
10x), resulting in a nominal spatial resolution of 21-30 pixels per
micrometer. For time-lapse imaging, 7- to 10-µm-deep Z-stacks (usually
composed of six slices, each 1.0-1.4 µm thick) were collected so that all
filopodia protruding from the dendritic structure were imaged. Stacks were
collected every 30 sec. For each time point, five to eight focal planes were
projected into a single image (Fig.
1). The lengths of all protrusions in every movie were obtained by
manually drawing skeleton versions of the dendrites with their protrusions
(Fig. 3). The analysis was done
blindly on unprocessed images, and there was no inter-rater variability
between two observers (C.P-C. and D.T.P.). Filtering was used subsequently
only for display purposes in the final figures shown here. All image
processing and analysis were done with custom-written macros in ImageJ
(http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/).
Images were aligned manually to correct for drift in the XY planes. Movies
containing frames that drifted out of focus (z-axis) were discarded.
Motility was calculated as the absolute difference in length of protrusions
from frame-to-frame, divided by the total number of frames. The value is,
thus, expressed in micrometers per 30 sec. Lifetime (in minutes) was
calculated as the number of frames in which a particular protrusion was
visible, divided by two. All statistical analyses were performed with Excel
software (Microsoft, Redmond, WA) using Student's t tests. Error bars
in graphs represent the SEM. In the text and in figure legends, n
indicates the number of protrusions and N the number of dendrite
segments analyzed (or the number of experiments for pharmacological
manipulations).

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Figure 1. Bolus of neurons with Alexa-488 and two-photon imaging of filopodia. Step 1
(bolus loading): cortical pyramidal neurons in layer 5 were identified in
acute slices from early postnatal mice under differential interference
contrast optics and then patched with pipettes containing 2 mM
Alexa-488. This dye diffuses quickly (<5 min) throughout the entire cell.
Step 2 (two-photon imaging): selected dendrites were imaged with a custom made
two-photon microscope using 800 nm excitation light. Twenty stacks, each
composed of 5-7 confocal slices (1-1.4 µm apart) in the XY plane, were
acquired every 30 sec. Step 3 (Z-projection): using ImageJ software, the
individual slices for each time point were projected along the z-axis
into a single image. Ten-minute-long (20 time points) time-lapse movies of
dendritic protrusions were, thus, generated. Step 4 (analysis): the lengths
and density of dendritic protrusions were measured using the ROI tool in
ImageJ (see Materials and Methods and Fig.
3).
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Figure 3. Dendritic filopodia are highly motile protrusions in early postnatal
development. Top, Skeleton representation of all 20 frames of the movie shown
in Figure 2. Individual
protrusions were traced in ImageJ (see Materials and Methods) in all 20 frames
of each time-lapse movie. Skeleton versions of movies of filopodia and other
protrusions were drawn for all dendrites imaged in this study throughout
development from P2 through P12 (a total of 56 dendrite segments and 1008
filopodia), to measure their lengths using custom-written macros in ImageJ. A
few representative filopodia are labeled; arrows point to the first and last
frame in which those filopodia can be distinguished. Bottom, Graph displaying
the lengths of the representative filopodia mentioned above over the same
10-min movie. Most filopodia appear and disappear over the 10-min imaging
period (e.g., filopodia #25, #32, and #51). At these early ages, only rare
filopodia were present throughout the length of the movie (e.g., filopodium
#10).
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Figure 2. High-resolution two-photon imaging of dendritic filopodia in early
postnatal neurons reveals their dynamism: motility is actin dependent.
A, Layer 5 pyramidal neuron in visual cortex of a P2 mouse imaged by
two-photon microscopy. Inset, Dendrite imaged in B. Scale bar, 25
µm. B, Time-lapse movie of dendrite from cell shown in A
(see movie 1 in supplementary data, available at
www.jneurosci.org).
Numerous filopodia protrude in and out of the dendrite. Note that filopodia
seem to be clustered at the dendrite tip (growth cone) compared with the
proximal shaft (see also Figs.
6 and
7). Images were acquired every
30 sec, but only half the time points are shown here. Scale bar, 5 µm.
C, Collapsed view of all frames of the movies shown above. This
displays nicely the exploratory behavior of filopodia throughout the 10-min
imaging period. D, Collapsed view of all 20 frames from a 10-min
movie of the same dendrite, 5 min after applying cytochalasin D (1 µg/ml),
an actin polymerization inhibitor, into the bath (see movie 2 in supplementary
data, available at
www.jneurosci.org).
Cytochalasin D significantly reduced filopodia motility (see
Fig. 9A).
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Our length and motility measurements for filopodia are likely to be slight
underestimates of the actual values because the z-axis projection
partially obscures the true lengths of filopodia going in and out of the final
Z-plane. Motility measurements would be further underestimated at early ages
by the fact that we did not take into account motility derived from the
bending, branching, or sweeping behavior of filopodia
(Fig. 4).

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Figure 4. Dendritic filopodia exhibit a wide range of motile behaviors. The motility
of dendritic filopodia at P2-P5 was manifested by a wide range of behaviors.
This included extension and retraction (first row), bending along the stem of
the filopodium (second row), rotation around an axis at the base of the
filopodium (third row), or branching (fourth row). Scale bar, 3 µm (for all
panels).
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Results
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Two-photon imaging reveals different types of motility of dendritic
filopodia
Layer 5 cortical neurons were imaged with two-photon microscopy in acute
slices after intracellular labeling with the fluorescent dye Alexa-488
(Fig. 1) (see Materials and
Methods). This bolus-loading method
(Majewska et al., 2000a )
permitted excellent visualization and resolution of dendritic filopodia as
early as P0, without delays because of gene expression, as occurs with
viral-mediated or gene-gun-based biolistic green fluorescent protein (GFP)
transfection systems (Lo et al.,
1994 ; Maletic-Savatic et al.,
1999 ). In time-lapse movies with images acquired at 30-sec
intervals, filopodia protruded in and out of dendritic shafts with remarkable
dynamism (see movie 1 in supplementary data, available at
www.jneurosci.org).
At early postnatal ages (P2-P3), filopodia were short-lived, with the vast
majority of filopodia appearing and disappearing within the 10-min imaging
period (Figs. 2 and
3).

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Figure 6. Differences between filopodia in axonal and dendritic growth cones and
between filopodia in dendritic growth cones and in dendritic shafts. Left,
Example of a typical dendritic shaft at P2-P5. Note that filopodia are shorter
than in both axonal growth cones and dendritic growth cones, and they are less
densely packed. There are also three hotspots of filopodia activity (white
arrows). These hotspots were frequently seen in young dendrites but almost
never after P6. Middle, Example of a typical dendritic growth cone at P2-P5.
Note how individual filopodia are easily identified (no webbing) and that
filopodia aim in all directions, including away from the tip of the dendrite.
Right, Example of a typical axonal growth cone at P2-P5. Note the long
filopodia and the webbing between filopodia. Almost all filopodia are oriented
at acute angles toward the tip of the axon. The different rows show different
time points in the 10-min time-lapse movies. The last row (below the black
arrows) shows collapsed sums of all 20 individual time points from each 10-min
movie. Scale bar, 3 µm.
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Figure 7. Developmental time course of dendritic protrusions: evidence for distinct
filopodia in growth cones and shafts. A, Density. The average density
of protrusions in dendritic tips decreases steadily throughout postnatal
development (from 1.3 per micrometer at P2-P3 to 0.6 per micrometer at
P10-P12), whereas the density of protrusions on dendritic shafts increases
during the second week of postnatal development (from 0.4 per micrometer to
0.7 per micrometer). The higher density of filopodia in growth cones (as
compared with those in shafts) at P2-P3 was statistically significant (large
asterisks). Note that values for mice aged P8-P12 consist of pooled data from
GFP- and Alexa-labeled neurons for ages >P6, although the majority of
analyzed dendrites came from Alexa-loaded neurons. B, Length. The
average length of all protrusions on dendritic tips at any given time
decreases throughout early development, as growth cones disappear (from 2.2
µm at P2-P3 to 0.95 µm at P10-P12). The average length of shaft
protrusions remains relatively stable at 1.5 µm. The longer lengths of
filopodia in growth cones (as compared with those in shafts) at P2-P3 and at
P4-P5 were statistically significant (black asterisks). The right panel shows
the frequency distribution of the average lengths individual protrusions
throughout development. C, Motility. The average motility of
protrusions in both dendritic tips and shafts decreases throughout early
postnatal development (from 0.8 µm/30 sec at P2-P3 to 0.25 µm/30
sec at P10-P12). The fastest recorded speeds exceeded 3 µm/30 sec. Motility
of protrusions was also significantly higher in dendritic growth cones than in
shafts at P2-P3 and at P4-P5, which is when growth cones can be observed
(black asterisks). The right panel shows the frequency distribution of
protrusion motility throughout development. Note that the frequency of highly
motile protrusions ( 0.8 µm/30 sec) decreases from 36% at P2-P3 to 5% at
P10-P12. D, Lifetime. The average lifetime of protrusions in both
dendritic tips and shafts increases steadily throughout early development
(from 3 min at P2-P3 to 7 min at P10-P12). Lifetimes were also
significantly higher in dendritic tips at P8-P9 and at P10-P12 (black
asterisks). The right panel shows the frequency distribution of protrusion
lifetimes throughout development. Note that two populations of protrusions can
be distinguished on the basis of their lifetimes, one with lifetimes 8 min
(stable; i.e., protospines) and the other with protrusion lifetimes 3 min
(transient; i.e., filopodia). For instance, 75% of all protrusions at any age
fall into either of these categories. E, Turnover. The average
turnover of dendritic tip protrusions (i.e., the number of protrusions added
per minute per 10 µm segment of dendrite) decreases from 3.5 at P2-P3 to
0.1 at P10-P12. A proportionally smaller but also statistically significant
decrease was observed in the turnover of shaft protrusions, from 1.2 at P2-P3
to 0.5 at P10-P12. The difference in turnover between shafts and tips was also
statistically significant at P2-P3, again demonstrating the particularly high
dynamism of dendritic growth cones. The reverse was true at P10-P12,
indicating that tip protrusions at older ages are the most stable of all
protrusions. Number of dendrites and individual protrusions analyzed for all
panels: for dendritic tips at P2-P3, P4-P5, P6-P7, P8-P9, and P10-P12,
N = 7, 4, 3, 4, and 5, respectively. For dendritic shafts at P2-P3,
P4-P5, P6-P7, P8-P9, and P10-P12, N = 8, 7, 4, 6, and 8,
respectively, where N = number of dendrites analyzed; for each
dendrite, values are averages of 20 time frames, 30 sec apart. In terms of the
number of individual protrusions (n), this corresponds to: for
dendritic tips at P2-P3, P4-P5, P6-P7, P8-P9, and P10-P12, n = 147,
46, 29, 28, and 13, respectively; for dendritic shafts at P2-P3, P4-P5, P6-P7,
P8-P9, and P10-P12, n = 150, 184, 77, 156, 178, respectively. That is
a total of 1008 protrusions and a total of 56 dendrite segments. Error bars
represent the SEM, which was calculated using the number of dendrites
(N) for measurements of density and length and using the number of
protrusions (n) for measurements of motility and lifetime.
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01;
***p < 0.001.
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Figure 9. Focal application of glutamate results in rapid elongation of a subset of
filopodia. A, Time-lapse movie of apical dendrite from a layer 5
pyramidal neuron at P4 (see movie 10 in supplementary data, available at
www.jneurosci.org).
Images were acquired every 60 sec, and representative time points are shown.
The white arrows separating certain frames represent the times when three
puffs (200 msec, 20 psi) of 100 µM glutamate were
delivered, corresponding to frames 10, 17, and 28. Note that by the end of the
movie, many filopodia have grown to lengths >5 µm. Scale bar, 5 µm.
B, In this low magnification view of a pyramidal neuron, the white
box delineates the region in which the movie in A was obtained. The
arrow points to the location of the pipette tip containing 100
µM glutamate (and Alexa-488). Scale bar, 20 µm. C,
Graph displaying the lengths of 45 representative filopodia from the 40-min
movie shown in A. Black arrows and gray columns designate the three
times when glutamate was puffed (200 msec puffs). Note that during the first
10 frames of the movie filopodia lengths never surpass 4 µm, whereas after
just two puffs of glutamate, a subset of filopodia have reached lengths well
above 4 µm. The effect of glutamate was quite rapid as shown by the sudden
increases (within 1 min) of some filopodia after individual puffs. D,
Frequency distribution of filopodia lengths before and after glutamate
application from five separate experiments. The gray histograms represent
pooled data from 117 filopodia analyzed in the first 10 frames of each movie,
whereas the black histograms represent data from 136 filopodia analyzed during
10 consecutive frames after at least two puffs of glutamate. Note that
glutamate induced growth to lengths >4 µm in a minority ( 10%) of
filopodia, rather than a small increase in the length of all the filopodia.
E, F, Another example of the effects of glutamate puffing on a P2
dendrite. The pipette was located 50 µm away, up and to the left of
the dendrite growth cone. E is a representative frame of the dendrite
with a growth cone in normal conditions. F is the same dendrite
30 min after three puffs of 200 µM glutamate. Scale bar, 5
µm.
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To quantify the filopodia motility, skeleton drawings of dendritic
protrusions at every frame of the 10-min movies were obtained
(Fig. 3). Measurements of the
lengths and numbers of protrusions in each frame of these movies allowed us to
obtain values for the average lengths and motility (average length change from
frame to frame) as well as for the average density and lifetime (i.e., the
duration of the movie in which an individual protrusion could be detected) of
protrusions. The maximum velocity of individual filopodial extension was
3 µm/30 sec. The formidable range of motile behavior included
extension and retraction, bending, branching, and even rotation (sweeping)
along the dendritic shaft (Fig.
4). The vast majority of filopodia simply extended and retracted
without branching, but sweeping and bending movements were also rather
frequent at early ages (<P6). However, during the second week of postnatal
development, protrusions simply extended and retracted, without branching,
sweeping, or bending.
We often observed hotspots of high filopodia activity in dendritic shafts
at early postnatal ages (P2-P5). Thus, several filopodia usually protruded
from specific locations along the dendritic shaft over the 10-min imaging
period (see Fig. 6, white
arrows). These hotspots occurred at irregular intervals (usually 5-10
µm apart), and in between these nodes of high filopodia activity were
relatively quiet segments of dendrite.
One of the advantages of two-photon microscopy is the reduced risk of photo
damage compared with conventional confocal microscopy
(Denk and Svoboda, 1997 ).
Nevertheless, prolonged exposure of living tissue to mode-locked infrared
light, as occurs in our time-lapse recordings, can still lead to photo damage
manifested as arrest of protrusion motility, resorption of filopodia, and
eventually blebbing of membranes into a rosary-like beaded pattern. Under our
imaging protocols, we did not observe photobleaching or phototoxicity (as
described previously) with average laser power under 4 mW at the specimen.
Dendrites that did not exhibit motility or were devoid of filopodia were
easily detected and excluded from the analysis. To further control for photo
damage, we compared the first 10 time points and the last 10 time points of
movies at P2-P5 (N = 23 dendrite segments) and found no statistically
significant differences in length or density of filopodia between the
beginning and the end of the imaging period (p = 0.37 and 0.92,
respectively) (data not shown). This suggests that photo damage was not a
confounding factor in our experiments. Furthermore, we have imaged dendrites
for more extended periods of time (60-min movies), and, qualitatively, we
found no obvious change in filopodia.
Filopodial motility is actin based and is also present in
GFP-expressing neurons
Because motility of dendritic spines is actin based
(Fischer et al., 1998 ), we
wondered whether filopodia motility was similarly regulated by the actin
cytoskeleton (Figs. 2D
and 10A) (see movie 2
in supplementary data, available at
www.jneurosci.org).
We tested this by bath application of cytochalasin D (N = 4
experiments; n = 192 filopodia), an inhibitor of actin
polymerization. In the presence of cyctochalasin D, we observed an 45%
decrease in the density of filopodia (p = 0.004), an 55%
decrease in the average filopodia motility (p = 0.011), and an
75% increase in the average lifetime of filopodia from 4.2 to 6.5 min
(p = 0.016). An 15% decrease in the average length of filopodia
and an 70% decrease in turnover did not quite reach significance
(p = 0.074 and p = 0.083, respectively). The changes in
density, lifetime, and turnover all recovered after washing out the drug
(p = 0.54, p = 0.43 and p = 0.94, respectively,
compared with control; N = 3 experiments with n = 90
additional filopodia), but this recovery required several hours ( 4
hr).

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Figure 10. Dendritic shaft filopodia, but not growth cone filopodia, are regulated by
neronal activity. A, Bath application of 1 µg/ml cytochalasin
D, an inhibitor of actin polymerization (n = 46; four
experiments), resulted in an 50% decrease in density (p =
0.004), an 55% decrease in motility (p = 0.011), and an 75%
increase in lifetime (p = 0.016) of dendritic protrusions. Shaft and
growth cone protrusions were equally affected. An 15% decrease in the
length of filopodia approached, but did not reach significance (p =
0.074), The effect on density and lifetime was reversible after washing out
the drug, because there were no significant differences between control and
washout conditions (p > 0.26; n = 90; three experiments).
This wash-out effect required several hours (the data come from dendrites
imaged on average 4 hr after washout of cytochalasin D). B,
Blocking neuronal activity with 1 µM TTX (n = 219; five
experiments) resulted in an 85% increase in the average density of shaft
filopodia (p = 0.04) and an 75% increase in the average length
of dendritic shaft filopodia (p = 0.05). Neither the density nor the
length of dendritic growth cone filopodia were significantly affected by TTX
(p = 0.70 and p = 0.69, respectively). Motility and lifetime
of filopodia were unaffected by TTX in either dendritic shafts (p
> 0.21) or growth cones (p > 0.54). C, Blocking
neuronal activity with calcium-free ACSF (n = 350; six experiments)
also resulted in an 125% increase in the average density (p =
0.05) and an 45% increase in the average length (p = 0.004) of
filopodia in dendritic shafts. Just as with TTX, neither the density nor the
length of dendritic growth cone filopodia were significantly affected in the
presence of zero-calcium ACSF (p = 0.52 and p = 0.88,
respectively). Motility and lifetime of filopodia were similarly unaffected by
zero-calcium ACSF in either dendritic shafts (p > 0.23) or growth
cones (p > 0.32). The effects of zero-calcium ACSF on dendritic
shaft filopodia density and length were reversible 30 min after washing in
normal ACSF containing 2 mM CaCl2 (p > 0.28
compared with control; N = 3 successful washouts; n = 59).
D, Blocking ionotropic glutamate receptors for 15-30 min with 20
µM CNQX and 40 µM D-APV resulted in an 35%
decrease in both the density (p = 0.006) and the turnover (p
= 0.04) of shaft filopodia (N = 8; n = 319) but had no
effect on length, motility, or lifetime of shaft protrusions
(p>0.15). CNQX/APV had no effect on growth cone filopodia
(p>0.56; N = 5; n = 164). These effects of
CNQX/APV on dendritic shaft filopodia were reversed 30-60 min after washing
out the drug (p > 0.63 compared with control; N = 4
successful washouts; n = 116).E, PicoSpritzer application of
100-200 µM glutamate resulted in an 75% increase in the
length of shaft filopodia (p = 0.004; N = 5; n =
251) but did not significantly affect the other parameters (p >
0.25). A trend toward lower density of growth cone filopodia was also observed
(p = 0.055; N = 2; n = 76). The histograms in
A-E reveal percentage differences compared with control dendrites
imaged before the application of the drugs or zero-calcium ACSF. Error bars
represent the SEM, using the number of experiments (N), rather than
the number of protrusions. *p < 0.05;
**p < 0.01.
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We also investigated whether the bolus injection could affect the dynamic
behavior of filopodia, because either the trauma of patching, the cytosolic
dialysis associated with whole-cell recordings, or our choice of dye could
potentially alter the motility. Thus, as a control, we also imaged dendritic
shaft protrusions of GFP-expressing neurons in retrosplenial and cingulate
cortex from GFP-M transgenic mice (Feng et
al., 2000 ). At P8-P12, we found no appreciable differences between
control Alexa-labeled neurons and GFP-expressing neurons (N = 6;
n = 157) in the motility (0.35 vs 0.32 µm/30 sec; p =
0.56), density (0.6 vs 0.7 protrusions/µm; p = 0.1), or lengths
(1.2 vs 1.5 µm; p = 0.09) of dendritic protrusions, suggesting
that the bolus-loading technique was innocuous to neurons.
Developmental regulation of dendritic filopodia
We next examined the developmental time course of the expression of early
dendritic protrusions. We prepared acute slices from mice at different
postnatal ages from P0 to P12 and imaged dendrites of layer 5 pyramidal
neurons in primary visual and somatosensory cortices, at 30-sec intervals. A
total of 56 dendrite segments and 1008 protrusions in growth cones and shafts
were analyzed in 10-min movies. Approximately five stages of protrusion
development were identified (Fig.
5) (see movies 3-7 in supplementary data, available at
www.jneurosci.org).
At P0-P1, pyramidal neurons had simplified dendritic trees relatively devoid
of protrusions, except for scattered growth cone filopodia at the tips of a
few growing dendrites (data not shown). These young neurons had an apical
dendrite without branches and usually fewer than two or three shorter basal
dendrites. In contrast, the growing axon had prominent growth cone filopodia
that were highly motile. At P2-P5, the dendrites had many filopodia at their
tips (forming typical dendritic growth cones) but somewhat fewer filopodia in
the shafts. Filopodia were very dynamic and were particularly active and long
at the dendrite tips (Figs. 2
and 6). By P6-P7, the neurons
had more mature dendritic trees, and most dendritic tips lacked the typical
growth cones seen at earlier ages. Instead, filopodia seemed evenly
distributed throughout the dendritic tree. By P8-P9, protrusions were shorter
and more stable but were still devoid of any bulbous swellings (spine heads)
at their tips. By P10-P12, most protrusions were stable throughout the 10-min
time-lapse movies, and some resembled spines because they had developed
typical heads. Nevertheless, even at these older ages, a small number of
filopodial protrusions still appeared and disappeared quickly within the
10-min imaging period.

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Figure 5. Dendritic filopodia are developmentally regulated; dendritic growth cones
disappear after P5. The first row (A) shows representative dendritic
segments of cortical neurons of mice at P2 through P10 (see movies 3-7 in
supplementary data, available at
www.jneurosci.org).
The second row (B) shows composite views of the first (red) and last
(green) frames of the 10-min time-lapse movies of the dendrites. The third row
(C) shows a collapsed view of all 20 frames of the 10-min movie at
each postnatal age. Scale bar, 5 µm. These panels show four results. First,
filopodia are longer and more densely packed in dendritic growth cones than in
shafts. Note that dendritic growth cones (bracket in C) are only
apparent at P2-P3 and P4-P5. Second, dendritic protrusions become
progressively more densely packed throughout early postnatal development and
become shorter in dendrite tips. Third, as judged by the overlap between first
and last time frames in each movie (second row), a switch from highly motile,
transient filopodia to more stable, immobile protrusions occurs throughout
early postnatal development. Fourth, spine-like protrusions, with bulbous
swellings at their tips (heads), begin to appear at P10-P12 (arrows in
A).
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In summary, we observed several distinct patterns of protrusion expression:
(1) there was a switch from very transient and highly motile protrusions in
the first few days of postnatal life to more stable and less motile
protrusions in the second week of development; and (2) there was a
corresponding morphological change from filopodia-like protrusions (long,
thin) in the first week of postnatal life to spine-like protrusions (short,
with heads) in the second week of life. Subsequent analysis of various
parameters of dendritic protrusions confirmed these observations (see below
and Fig. 7).
Differences among filopodia in dendritic growth cones and shafts, and
axonal growth cones
We next compared the physical characteristics and dynamic behavior of
filopodia in dendritic shafts, dendritic growth cones, and axonal growth cones
(Figs. 5 and
6). First, we compared
dendritic filopodia in shafts versus growth cones. Filopodia in dendritic
growth cones are more densely packed and were longer than those in dendritic
shafts (Fig. 6, compare left
and middle columns; Fig. 7).
Next, we compared filopodia in dendritic versus axonal growth cones
(Fig. 6, compare middle and
right columns). Axonal growth cones had a more fanned morphology, with
filopodia protruding at acute angles from the tip of the dendrite
(Fig. 6, right column).
Interestingly, the typical webbed appearance that is traditionally associated
with axonal growth cones in cultured neurons was also observed in axonal
growth cones in acute slices (Fig.
6, right column), but not in dendritic growth cones
(Fig. 6, middle column).
Moreover, axonal filopodia did not bend as frequently and almost never had the
branching behavior that was observed in dendritic filopodia
(Fig. 4). Quantitative analysis
revealed that axonal filopodia (n = 36, from three axon growth cones)
were, on average, 50% longer (3.3 vs 2.2 µm; p < 0.001) (data
not shown) and 50% more densely packed (2.1 vs 1.4 protrusions/µm;
p < 0.001) (data not shown) than their dendritic counterparts at
the same age.
Evidence for two types of filopodia in dendritic shafts and growth
cones at P2-P5
We sought to establish whether the qualitative differences observed in
filopodia from dendritic shafts and growth cones were indeed significant
(Figs. 6 and
7). To distinguish filopodia in
dendritic tips versus shafts, we divided terminal dendrites into two regions,
such that the distal 5 µm segment was considered as the tip and the
remaining proximal part was labeled "shaft". This division point
was based on a rough estimate of the length of typical growth cones by visual
inspection. Moreover, using a cutoff of >5 µm did not capture as great a
difference between growth cone and shaft filopodia. It should be noted that
the actual boundary between shaft and growth cone might actually vary slightly
from dendrite to dendrite. In the shaft category, we included both dendrite
segments proximal to the tips but also additional shaft segments chosen at
random.
When comparing dendritic tips (n = 129; N = 7) to shafts
(n = 163; N = 8) at P2-P3, several statistically significant
differences were found. First, the density of filopodia was approximately
three times greater in growth cones than in shafts (1.31 vs 0.45 filopodia per
micrometer; p < 0.001; Fig.
7A). Second,
growth cone filopodia were, on average, 37% longer than shaft
filopodia (2.18 vs 1.59 µm; p = 0.019;
Fig. 7B). Third,
motility was 25% greater for growth cone filopodia than for shaft
filopodia (1.72 vs 1.38 µm/min; p = 0.0011;
Fig. 7C.). Despite
this greater motility, there was no difference in the lifetime of filopodia
between dendritic growth cones and shafts at that early age (both 3.1 min;
p = 0.87; Fig.
7D). Taking into account that growth cone filopodia at
early ages are able to fill the entire neuropil surrounding the growth cone in
<10 min (Fig. 2C),
we estimate that filopodia in a typical 5 µm growth cone at P2-P3 (average
maximum length of filopodia, 2.5 µm) can explore an 50
µm3 volume of neuropil.
As a separate index, we also calculated a protrusion turnover rate, defined
as the average number of protrusions that appeared or disappeared every
minute, per 10 µm segment of dendrite. We found that, at P2-P3, the number
of filopodia lost or gained every minute was more than three times greater in
growth cones than in shafts (3.8 vs 1.2 filopodia/min per 10 µm segment of
dendrite; p = 0.011; Fig.
7E).
Dendritic growth cones disappear after P5
Smaller differences in density, length, and motility of protrusions located
on dendritic tips versus shafts persisted at P4-P5
(Fig. 7; p < 0.05
for all three comparisons), suggesting that dynamic growth cones still existed
at the tips of dendrites at that age. Interestingly, such differences could no
longer be detected at P6-P7 (n = 106; N = 11; p =
0.06-0.7), P8-P9 (n = 184; N = 10; p = 0.11-0.52),
or P10-P12 (n = 191; N = 13; p = 0.1-0.52), and
this coincided with our inability to discern dendritic growth cones after P5
(Fig. 5). At P10-P12, the
average length of tip protrusions seemed shorter than that of shaft
protrusions, but this difference was not statistically significant (0.93 vs
1.45 µm; n = 13 and 178, respectively; p = 0.1;
Fig. 7B). However, the
protrusion turnover value was now lower in tips than in shafts (0.09 vs 0.55
filopodia/min per 10 µm segment of dendrite; p = 0.002;
Fig. 7E). This
difference in turnover, combined with the observation that at P10-P12 lifetime
was higher in tips than in shafts (8.5 vs 6.6 min; p = 0.018;
Fig. 7D), suggests
that tip protrusions may eventually become the most stable of all.
Finally, we also compared protrusions from apical versus basal dendrites
(n = 421), as well as from visual versus somatosensory cortices
(n = 329), at different postnatal ages. We found no statistically
significant differences in any of the four parameters of density, length,
motility, and lifetime (data not shown) (p > 0.40 for all
comparisons, except p = 0.07 for density of protrusions at P10-0P12,
which was 0.9 per micrometer in apical dendrites versus. 0.6 per micrometer in
basal dendrites). This suggests that the phenomena we are observing are
universal among protrusions from all cortical pyramidal neurons and from
different dendritic branches within a neuron.
Dendritic protrusions become shorter, less motile, and more stable
throughout development
When we quantified the density, length, motility, lifetime, and protrusion
turnover throughout development, we found several statistically significant
patterns. First, the density of dendritic shaft protrusions increased by 60%
from P2-P3 to P10-P12 (from 0.45 to 0.72 protrusions per micrometer;
p = 0.022; Fig.
7A). Instead, the density of dendritic growth cones/tip
protrusions decreased over the same time period (from 1.31 to 0.59 protrusions
per micrometer; p = 002; Fig.
7A), again coinciding with the disappearance of growth
cones from the distal most aspect of dendrites. Second, whereas the average
length of dendritic tip protrusions decreased steadily throughout early
cortical development (from 2.2 µm at P2-P3 to 0.9 µm at P10-P12;
p = 004; Fig.
7B), the slight decrease in length of shaft protrusions
was not significant (p = 0.47). The average length of individual
protrusions throughout their lifetime followed identical trends (data not
shown). The average maximum length achieved by individual shaft protrusions
also decreased significantly throughout early postnatal development. For
example, the average maximum length of shaft filopodia decreased from 2.0
µm at P2-P3 to 1.5 µm at P10-P12 (p < 0.001) (data not
shown). Third, the motility of dendritic protrusions decreased steadily in
both tips and shafts between P2-P3 and P10-P12 ( 0.8 µm/30 sec vs
0.2 µm/30 sec; p < 0.001;
Fig. 7C). Fourth, the
lifetime of dendritic protrusions increased throughout the first 2 weeks of
postnatal development (from 3 min at P2-P3 to 7.5 min at P10-P12;
p < 0.001; Fig.
7D). Moreover, the fraction of stable protrusions that
lasted the entire 10-min movie increased from 4% at P2-P3 to 45% at P10-P12
(Fig. 7D). The
distribution of protrusion lifetimes showed that >75% of all protrusions at
any age fall into either of two distinct categories of protrusions, one with
lifetimes 3 min and another with lifetimes 8 min
(Fig. 7D). Thus, even
at P10-P12 when most protrusions were rather stable (persisting throughout the
10-min movie), short-lived protrusions (i.e., filopodia) were also
present.
Dendritic protrusions are regulated by neuronal activity and synaptic
transmission
We next investigated whether the differences between dendritic growth cones
and shafts, with respect to the density, length, and motility of filopodia,
had any functional significance. To do so, we tested the hypothesis that
blocking neuronal activity might have differential effects on dendritic
filopodia in shafts versus growth cones. It has been reported that blocking
synaptic activity can lead to alterations in the density of mature dendritic
spines (Kirov and Harris,
1999 ), but it is not clear whether filopodia are also regulated by
neuronal activity. For example, in living retinal ganglion cells, the rate and
extent of movement in dendritic appendages is decreased by ionotropic
glutamate receptor antagonists but not by TTX, a sodium channel blocker that
blocks most synaptic activity (Wong et
al., 2000 ). Also, experiments in cultured slices have suggested
that filopodia-like protrusions can emerge from dendrites after synaptic
activation over a time scale of tens of minutes
(Maletic-Savatic et al.,
1999 ).
We studied the effects of activity blockade in the presence of TTX or
zero-calcium conditions, to block synaptic transmission, on dendritic
filopodia at P2-P5, the period of growth cones and of exclusive filopodial
expression (no spines). Both of these manipulations resulted in a substantial
increase in the number and length of dendritic shaft filopodia
(Fig. 8A,C) (see
movies 8 and 9 in supplementary data, available at
www.jneurosci.org)
but, surprisingly, had no effect on dendritic growth cone filopodia
(Fig. 8B). On
quantitative analysis, we found that, in the presence of TTX (N = 5
experiments), dendritic shaft filopodia (n = 216) were 125% longer
(2.4 vs 1.7 µm; p = 0.02) and 50% more densely packed (0.4 vs
0.6 filopodia per micrometer; p = 0.03) compared with control
conditions (Fig.
10B). Similarly, in zero-calcium ACSF, there was a 75%
increase in the density (0.7 vs 0.4; p = 0.05) and an 45%
increase in the length (2.0 vs 1.4 µm; p = 0.004) of dendritic
shaft filopodia (Fig.
10C; N = 6 experiments; n = 251
filopodia). In contrast, we observed no effects on density or length of
filopodia in dendritic growth cones using either TTX
(Fig. 10B; N
= 5; n = 177; p = 0.7 and p = 0.69, respectively)
or zero-calcium ACSF (Fig.
10C; N = 4; n = 97, p = 0.52
and p = 0.88, respectively). Interestingly, the rapid motility and
lifetime of growth cone or shaft filopodia were not significantly changed by
either TTX (p > 0.21; Fig.
10B) or zero calcium ACSF (p > 0.23;
Fig. 10C). The
effects of zero calcium (but not those of TTX) on density and length of
dendritic filopodia could be reversed 30 min after washing in control ACSF
with 2 mM CaCl2
(Fig. 10C; N
= 3; n = 44; p > 0.4 compared with control).

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Figure 8. Blockade of global synaptic activity results in longer, more motile
filopodia. A, Dendritic shaft from a control neuron at P3 in control
ACSF (2 mM CaCl2). The left, middle, and right panels in
each row show representative snapshots of dendritic filopodia in the
beginning, middle, and end of the 10-min movies. Scale bar, 5 µm (for all
panels). A', Same dendritic shaft segment 7 min after
continuous bath application of 1 µM TTX. Note the dramatic
elongation of many filopodia in three different frames of a 10-min time-lapse
movie. B, Dendritic growth cone from a control neuron at P4 in
control ACSF (2 mM CaCl2). B', Same
dendritic growth cone 30 min after continuous bath application of TTX.
Note that there is no change in the density or length of growth cone
filopodia. C, Dendritic growth cone from a control neuron at P3 in
control ACSF (2 mM CaCl2). See movie 8 in supplementary
data, available at
www.jneurosci.org.
C', Same dendritic growth cone 25 min after washing in
zero-calcium ACSF. Note the dramatic elongation of many filopodia in three
different frames of a 10-min time-lapse movie. This effect was reversible
because filopodia lengths and motility recovered after washout. See movie 9 in
supplementary data, available at
www.jneurosci.org.
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Glutamate differentially regulates filopodia in dendritic shafts and
growth cones
Spiny dendrites of pyramidal cells receive predominantly excitatory
glutamatergic inputs. Thus, we next asked the question of whether glutamate
itself modulates dendritic filopodia at P2-P5. Blockade of NMDA and non-NMDA
glutamate receptors with bath application of specific antagonists (40
µM D-APV and 20 µM CNQX, respectively) led to
35% reduction in both the density (p = 0.006) and turnover
(p = 0.04) of shaft filopodia
(Fig. 10D; N
= 8; n = 319) but did not affect growth cone filopodia (p
> 0.56; N = 5; n = 164). The effects of CNQX and
D-APV on the density and turnover of shaft filopodia could be
washed out (p > 0.63 compared with control;
Fig. 10D; N
= 4 successful washouts; n = 116). Similar effects on shaft filopodia
were observed when MK-801 (another NMDA receptor antagonist) was used instead
of D-APV (N = 2) (data not shown), but MK-801 could not be
washed out.
We also tested the effects of direct application of glutamate by puffing
small amounts of the neurotransmitter from a glass micropipette (connected to
a Pico-Spritzer), the tip of which was located 10-50 µm away from the
dendrite of interest. Delivery of brief puffs (50-200 msec) of 100-200
µM glutamate resulted in a sudden (within 60 sec) and sustained
(several minutes) increase in the length of many, but not all, filopodia
(Fig. 9A). In most
experiments, many filopodia reached lengths of 8 µm, and in one case a
filopodium grew toward the pipette, reaching a maximum length of 16 µm
(data not shown). A frequency distribution histogram of the average lengths of
individual shaft filopodia demonstrates that glutamate produced a robust
elongation to lengths >4 µm in only 10% of all filopodia, rather
than a small increase in the length of all filopodia
(Fig. 9D). This
suggests that a minority of protrusions may be primed to respond to the
neurotransmitter at any point in time. On aver-
age, glutamate led to a 75% increase in the average length of shaft
filopodia (p = 0.004; N = 5; n = 251;
Fig. 10E) but did not
significantly affect other parameters. Again, filopodia in growth cones were
differentially regulated. Local application of glutamate did not result in an
elongation of growth cone filopodia (p = 0.38), although it did cause
a 40% decrease in the density (p = 0.055) of growth cone filopodia
(Fig. 10E; N
= 2; n = 76 filopodia).
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Discussion
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Dendritic filopodia are nearly ubiquitously expressed in the developing
CNS, yet their function is still poorly understood. Our goal was to analyze
the behavior of dendritic filopodia in cortical pyramidal neurons throughout
early postnatal development, to begin to understand the function of these
early dendritic protrusions.
Previous studies of filopodia have used a variety of preparations,
including perfusion-fixed material (Saito
et al., 1997 ; Fiala et al.,
1998 ), dissociated neuronal cultures
(Ziv and Smith, 1996 ), and
organotypic cultures (Dailey and Smith,
1996 ). Some of the in vitro studies showed that filopodia
are dynamic protrusions, but the time scale used ( 6 min/measurement) did
not allow precise measurements of their rapid motility
(Dailey and Smith, 1996 ;
Ziv and Smith, 1996 ). Also,
because those studies relied on cultured preparations, it is not known whether
the maturation of filopodia follows a similar course in the more intact CNS.
Finally, none of the previous studies looked at dendritic protrusions at very
early ages (e.g., P2) and were, thus, biased toward more mature, spine-like
protrusions.
Building on that pioneer work, our study is a comprehensive attempt at
characterizing dendritic filopodia with respect to five important parameters
(density, length, motility, lifetime, and turnover) and their regulation by
neuronal activity. We show that dendritic filopodia are highly dynamic
protrusions that are both temporally and spatially regulated. Our analysis
demonstrates a developmental switch from highly motile and transient filopodia
to relatively immobile and stable protrusions. Filopodia in growth cones
behave differently than filopodia in shafts, and neuronal activity regulates
dendritic shaft filopodia but not growth cone filopodia, suggesting distinct
roles for filopodia in these two dendritic compartments. We propose the
existence of a continuum of different types of dendritic shaft protrusions and
that neuronal activity, and in particular glutamatergic transmission, may
modulate this continuum. Although we focused on layer 5 pyramidal neurons from
primary visual cortex, our observations in other cortical areas and layers
suggest that this developmental, spatial, and activity regulation of dendritic
filopodia represents a universal phenomenon.
Methodological considerations
It is possible that the slicing procedure may affect the parameters we
studied (Kirov et al., 1999 ).
To prevent any problems related to slicing, we limited our experiments to a
specific window of time (1-4 hr after slicing). Importantly, our numbers for
density and length of early dendritic protrusions compare nicely with those
derived from age-matched perfusion-fixed rat hippocampus analyzed with serial
electron microscopy (C. Portera-Cailliau and K. Harris, unpublished
observations), or with Golgi or biocytin stains
(Linke et al., 1994 ). Thus, we
feel that our slice data are a close reflection of what occurs in
vivo. One should also remember that the alternative, in vivo
imaging of spine or filopodial motility in anesthetized animals
(Chen et al., 2000 ;
Lendvai et al., 2000 ;
Grutzendler et al., 2002 ;
Trachtenberg et al., 2002 ),
may be confounded by the effect of anesthetics, which appear to stop
actin-based motility (Kaech et al.,
1999 ). Furthermore, the surgery itself, as well as potential
alterations in blood flow dynamics resulting from immobilization of the brain
to reduce pulsation artifacts, could also alter protrusion motility.
Growth cone filopodia: a role in dendritic growth and branching
One of the less predictable observations in this study was the finding that
filopodia in dendritic growth cones are significantly more motile, longer, and
more densely packed than filopodia in dendritic shafts. This suggests
different roles for these two types of filopodia. Moreover, we found that
dendritic growth cone filopodia are insensitive to neuronal activity blockade.
This observation seems to contradict the synaptotropic hypothesis
(Vaughn, 1989 ) that posits
that dendritic growth cones grow toward sources of neuronal activity. Just as
axonal growth cone filopodia are believed to guide axons to their target
destinations, we propose that filopodia in dendritic growth cones also sense a
chemical gradient to guide the dendrite, but this process is activity
independent, at least in the short term (<30 min). Dendritic growth cones
occur only transiently in development before P5, suggesting that dendritic tip
growth and branching are essentially completed by that time. Additional
dendritic growth after P5 must occur interstitially within the shafts, as the
neuropil expands with the proliferation of glia, interneurons, and their
processes. The longer lifetimes of tip protrusions after P8 suggests that when
the dendritic tip growth is over, some very stable protrusions slowly replace
the growth cone filopodia and anchor the dendrite tip in place.
Shaft filopodia: a role in synaptogenesis or spinogenesis
We report that neuronal activity regulates filopodia in dendritic shafts
but not in growth cones. These results are consistent with the reported
effects of activity blockade on spine density in cortical pyramidal neurons
(Kirov et al., 1999 ) and in
cerebellar Purkinje neurons (Bravin et al.,
1999 ). The finding that ionotropic glutamate receptor antagonists
result in a decrease in the density of shaft filopodia is similarly in
agreement with previous-work on dendritic appendages on retinal ganglion cells
(Wong et al., 2000 ). Given
that synapses are known to exist along dendritic shaft filopodia
(Saito et al., 1997 ;
Fiala et al., 1998 ), one
function of shaft filopodia may be to make early synapses. Our finding that
some dendritic shaft filopodia elongate in response to glutamate supports this
notion (similar findings were briefly noted in dissociated hippocampal neurons
by Smith and colleagues (Smith and Jahr,
1992 ; Cornell-Bell et al.,
1990 ). Thus, dendritic shafts may be seeking suitable synaptic
partners by sensing glutamate gradients and, thus, extend filopodia toward
nearby boutons to bridge the gap. At the same time, an explanation that would
reconcile the somewhat contradictory TTX and CNQX/APV results remains elusive
to us. One simple explanation is that TTX
and zero-calcium conditions block neuronal activity globally, leading to
alterations in a variety of both presynaptic and postsynaptic processes
(including release of tropic substances other than glutamate). Thus, in the
complete absence of neuronal activity, dendritic shafts broaden the search for
axonal partners by increasing the numbers and lengths of filopodia. The
opposite occurs during maturation when, as activity increases, dendritic
protrusions stabilize (Fig.
11). And during development, a balanced basal level global
activity is intermittently punctuated by local bursts of glutamate release
that guide filopodia to their nearby targets.

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Figure 11. A continuum of dendritic shaft protrusions throughout early postnatal
development. This graph plots motility on the x-axis against lifetime
on the y-axis for a total of 342 individual shaft protrusions at
P2-P5 (dark blue) and 333 individual shaft protrusions at P8-P12 (light
orange). The plot again demonstrates that at younger ages shaft protrusions
are indeed more motile and have shorter lifetimes than at older ages, as was
shown in Figure 5. The
distribution of protrusions at either age is best fit by an exponential curve,
but the characteristics of the distributions are different. At younger ages,
as protrusion motility varies lifetime changes very little. The opposite is
true at older ages when, as protrusions shift toward less motility, their
lifetime increases considerably (and vice versa). On the basis of this
distribution, a continuum of dendritic shaft protrusions can be discerned from
the rapidly motile and transient filopodia (bottom right) to the relatively
immobile and permanent dendritic spines (top left). We have arbitrarily
defined several clusters of filopodia along this continuum. The insets show
representative examples of imaged protrusions falling into several arbitrary
categories of filopodia along this continuum, as well as an example of
dendritic spines at P12. We speculate that neuronal activity regulates early
dendritic protrusions such that, as neuronal activity increases throughout
development, protrusions change along this continuum from filopodia to
spine-like protrusions. Indeed, in more mature dendrites, some filopodia
developed heads at their tips, thus resembling dendritic spines (arrowhead).
Arrows indicate the position along the dendrite in which filopodia will appear
in the next frame. Scale bar, 3 µm. Time stamps in white indicate minutes
within a 10-min time-lapse movie.
|
|
It has been proposed that filopodia are precursors to spines, because of
similarities in shape and the temporal order in which they appear during
development (Ziv and Smith,
1996 ). One strong argument against this idea is that many adult
neurons devoid of spines undergo a phase in development (at the time of early
synaptogenesis), during which their dendrites bear numerous filopodia
(Lund et al., 1977 ;
Mason, 1983 ;
Dvergsten et al., 1986 ;
Ulfhake and Cullheim, 1988 ;
Wong et al., 1992 ;
Linke et al., 1994 ). Our
current data also suggest that the predominant role of filopodia is not to
give rise to spines, because the peak of filopodia expression occurs before
P5, nearly 1 week before the first spine-like protrusions appear. We
calculated the individual shaft protrusion turnover to be 1.2
filopodia/min per 10 µm shaft segment of a P2-P3 dendrite. Because shaft
filopodia density at that age is 4.5 per 10 µm, we estimate that over
a 10-min movie, all the shaft filopodia would have recycled 2.5 times
over. Also, a P2-P3 neuron with 10 dendrites each measuring 30 µm (a
conservative estimate) would extend and retract over 50,000 shaft filopodia
over the course of 1 d. One can only conclude that the astronomical energy
expenditure associated with this protrusion turnover in the first week of
postnatal development is not aimed at the creation of spines, which occurs
several days later. Instead, we favor the hypothesis that this intense
filopodia activity corresponds to selective synaptogenesis with adequate
presynaptic partners. This view is not incompatible, however, with the idea
that, at older ages, some filopodia that become stabilized (protospines) could
transform into spines (Fig.
11).
A developmental continuum of early dendritic shaft protrusions:
distinguishing filopodia from spines
Despite gross morphological similarities, most of the evidence thus far
suggests that spines and filopodia are different types of dendritic
protrusions (for review, see
Portera-Cailliau and Yuste,
2001 ). One of the strengths of our study is our fast temporal
resolution because this allowed detailed measurements of the dynamic behavior
of filopodia and spines. Thus, even though descriptive and static parameters
(length, presence of head, etc.) are, unfortunately, still used routinely to
distinguish spines from filopodia, we argue that lifetime and motility may be
more accurate parameters to distinguish filopodia (lifetime, 3 min;
motility, 0.8 µm/30 sec) from spines (lifetime, >8 min; motility,
0.4 µm/30 sec). Indeed, plotting lifetime versus motility for all
protrusions analyzed reveals a two-dimensional continuum of dendritic shaft
protrusions, with some apparent clusters
(Fig. 11). We have arbitrarily
subdivided this spectrum and distinguished between several distinct
populations of dendritic shaft protrusions. In the first 5 d of postnatal
development, one can identify not only slow-moving protrusions with long
lifetimes (red cluster) as well as the fastest-moving protrusions with short
lifetimes (green cluster), but also slow-moving protrusions with short
lifetimes (blue cluster). In the second week of postnatal development, the
majority of protrusions are either nonmotile with long lifetimes (purple
cluster) or slow-moving transient protrusions, whereas faster-moving
protrusions are virtually nonexistent. We propose that neuronal activity
modulates this continuum, such that as the brain matures and synaptic activity
increases, protrusions shorten and become less motile.
A dual model for filopodial function
As mentioned previously, some investigators have argued that dendritic
filopodia mediate dendritic growth and branching
(Vaughn, 1989 ), whereas others
have argued that filopodia give rise to dendritic spines
(Ziv and Smith, 1996 ). On the
basis of our data, we propose a solution to the existing controversy on the
potential function of dendritic filopodia
(Fig. 12). We would dissociate
these two functions and argue that they are carried out by different
populations of filopodia. In dendritic growth cones, like in axonal growth
cones, filopodia would respond to guidance molecules (while being relatively
insensitive to axonal cues or neuronal activity) and be responsible for
dendritic growth and branching. At the same time, filopodia located in
dendritic shafts would actively seek axonal terminals, presumably following
glutamate gradients, to establish synaptic contacts with them and, at more
mature stages, to further develop into spines. These two populations of
filopodia might have different molecular structures and/or be linked to
different molecular motors or second messenger cascades that reflect these
diverging functions.

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Figure 12. Summary diagram and hypothesis: proposed roles for filopodia in dendritic
shafts and growth cones. A, The typical appearance of a dendrite at
early stages of postnatal development (P2-P3) in a cortical pyramidal neuron
in the mouse. Growth cone filopodia (red) are longer and more densely packed
than dendritic shaft filopodia (blue). Note that shaft filopodia seem
clustered in hotspots along the dendrite shaft. On the basis of our
observations from TTX experiments, we hypothesize that these shaft filopodia
respond to synaptic activity from axons (active boutons in green), whereas
growth cone filopodia seem to ignore these boutons, because they are reaching
for a distinct, activity-independent signal. At this age, many boutons are
inactive and do not seem to attract any shaft filopodia. B, Right,
Schematic of the appearance of the same dendrite 1 week later (P10-P12). The
previous growth cone activity has guided the dendrite tip toward the location
of chemoattractive signal. Note that protrusions at the dendrite tip are
shorter than they were at P2-P3 and less densely packed, making the tips
indistinguishable from dendritic shafts. In contrast, shaft protrusions have
become more numerous, presumably in response to the growing number of axons.
Although there are still some motile filopodia (still reaching toward active
boutons), the majority of protrusions are now relatively immobile. We
hypothesize that this is because of the fact that they have established
nascent synaptic contacts with the active boutons (yellow flash). C,
In the adult brain, dendritic filopodia have been replaced by spines, which
have established mature synapses with their presynaptic partners. The overall
density of protrusions has increased, presumably as a result of further
increases in the number of inputs. Note that not all spines occur at locations
previously occupied by a filopodium, implying that not all filopodia turn into
spines. Protrusions at the tip and shaft are indistinguishable from one
another. D, In the absence of neuronal activity (TTX), shaft
filopodia elongate and become more numerous. Growth cone filopodia are not
affected by this blockade of neuronal activity, at least in the short term
(minutes). E, In the presence of ionotropic glutamate receptor
blockers, the density of shaft filopodia is reduced, whereas growth cone
filopodia are unaffected. F, The fact that a subset of shaft
filopodia elongate after focal application of glutamate argues that the
excitatory transmitter functions as a chemoattractant for shaft, but not
growth cone, filopodia. Some shaft filopodia must, therefore, be primed to
respond to active boutons. The observation that the density of filopodia was
decreased after glutamate application in some growth cones suggests that
glutamate may also serve as a growth arrest signal for dendrites.
|
|
Our model predicts that the dynamic nature of both types of filopodia would
be essential for their function, such that any approach to reduce or otherwise
modify this motility could disrupt their ability to shape dendritic trees or
form synapses. Additional investigations into clarifying the function of
dendritic filopodia could be important to understand disorders such as mental
retardation, autism, or epilepsy, characterized by abnormalities of dendritic
protrusions (Fiala et al.,
2001 ; Portera-Cailliau and
Yuste, 2001 ). Because filopodia probably mediate the process
whereby dendrites make contact with their appropriate presynaptic partners, it
follows that dysfunctional filopodia behavior and synaptogenesis could lead to
aberrant circuits and neurological disturbances.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Received Feb. 5, 2003;
revised Jun. 9, 2003;
accepted Jun. 12, 2003.
This work was supported by National Eye Institute Grant EY13237, the New
York Science To Achieve Results Center of the National Center for
Environmental Research for High Resolution Imaging of Functional Neural
Circuits, the John Merck Fund, and the National Parkinson Foundation. We thank
Constantino Sotelo and Kristen Harris for sharing unpublished data, Ayumu
Tashiro and Sila Konur for comments, and Huib Mansvelder and Volodymyr
Nikolenko for advice on two-photon imaging. We also thank Joshua Sanes and
Ania Majewska for providing GFP-M mice for control experiments.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Carlos Portera-Cailliau,
Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia University, 1212 Amsterdam Avenue,
1002 Fairchild, New York, NY 10027. E-mail:
ccailliau{at}neuro.columbia.edu.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience
0270-6474/03/237129-14$15.00/0
 |
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