AI Article Synopsis

  • Neurite outgrowth happens when a special receptor called cannabinoid-1 is triggered, causing the entire cell to respond in a coordinated way.
  • Researchers studied the different biochemical pathways involved in this response and found many processes that help the cell grow neurites.
  • They discovered that some critical processes work deeper in the cell while others are directly related to growing the parts required for neurite extension, meaning many pathways are needed for this growth to happen correctly.

Article Abstract

Neurite outgrowth is an integrated whole cell response triggered by the cannabinoid-1 receptor. We sought to identify the many different biochemical pathways that contribute to this whole cell response. To understand underlying mechanisms, we identified subcellular processes (SCPs) composed of one or more biochemical pathways and their interactions required for this response. Differentially expressed genes and proteins were obtained from bulk transcriptomics and proteomic analysis of extracts from cells stimulated with a cannabinoid-1 receptor agonist. We used these differentially expressed genes and proteins to build networks of interacting SCPs by combining the expression data with prior pathway knowledge. From these SCP networks, we identified additional genes that when ablated, experimentally validated the SCP involvement in neurite outgrowth. Our experiments and informatics modeling allowed us to identify diverse SCPs such as those involved in pyrimidine metabolism, lipid biosynthesis, and mRNA splicing and stability, along with more predictable SCPs such as membrane vesicle transport and microtubule dynamics. We find that SCPs required for neurite outgrowth are widely distributed among many biochemical pathways required for constitutive cellular functions, several of which are termed 'deep', since they are distal to signaling pathways and the key SCPs directly involved in extension of the neurite. In contrast, 'proximal' SCPs are involved in microtubule growth and membrane vesicle transport dynamics required for neurite outgrowth. From these bioinformatics and dynamical models based on experimental data, we conclude that receptor-mediated regulation of subcellular functions for neurite outgrowth is both distributed, that is, involves many different biochemical pathways, and deep.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9520007PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2022.102325DOI Listing

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