Microtubule networks in zebrafish hair cells facilitate presynapse transport and fusion during development

  1. Section on Sensory Cell Development and Function, National Institute on Deafness and other Communication Disorders, Bethesda, MD, 20892, USA
  2. Presynaptogenesis and Intracellular Transport in Hair Cells Junior Research Group, Institute for Auditory Neuroscience and InnerEarLab, University Medical Center Goettingen, 37075 Goettingen, Germany
  3. Collaborative Research Center 889 ‘Cellular Mechanisms of Sensory Processing’, 37075 Goettingen, Germany

Peer review process

Not revised: This Reviewed Preprint includes the authors’ original preprint (without revision), an eLife assessment, public reviews, and a response from the authors (if available).

Read more about eLife’s peer review process.

Editors

  • Reviewing Editor
    Andrew King
    University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom
  • Senior Editor
    Andrew King
    University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom

Reviewer #1 (Public Review):

Summary:

The manuscript by Hussain and collaborators aims at deciphering the microtubule-dependent ribbon formation in zebrafish hair cells. By using confocal imaging, pharmacology tools, and zebrafish mutants, the group of Katie Kindt convincingly demonstrated that ribbon, the organelle that concentrates glutamate-filled vesicles at the hair cell synapse, originates from the fusion of precursors that move along the microtubule network. This study goes hand in hand with a complementary paper (Voorn et al.) showing similar results in mouse hair cells.

Strengths:

This study clearly tracked the dynamics of the microtubules, and those of the microtubule-associated ribbons and demonstrated fusion ribbon events. In addition, the authors have identified the critical role of kinesin Kif1aa in the fusion events. The results are compelling and the images and movies are magnificent.

Weaknesses:

The lack of functional data regarding the role of Kif1aa. Although it is difficult to probe and interpret the behavior of zebrafish after nocodazole treatment, I wonder whether deletion of kif1aa in hair cells may result in a functional deficit that could be easily tested in zebrafish?

Impact:

The synaptogenesis in the auditory sensory cell remains still elusive. Here, this study indicates that the formation of the synaptic organelle is a dynamic process involving the fusion of presynaptic elements. This study will undoubtedly boost a new line of research aimed at identifying the specific molecular determinants that target ribbon precursors to the synapse and govern the fusion process.

Reviewer #2 (Public Review):

Summary:

In this manuscript, the authors set out to resolve a long-standing mystery in the field of sensory biology - how large, presynaptic bodies called "ribbon synapses" migrate to the basolateral end of hair cells. The ribbon synapse is found in sensory hair cells and photoreceptors, and is a critical structural feature of a readily-releasable pool of glutamate that excites postsynaptic afferent neurons. For decades, we have known these structures exist, but the mechanisms that control how ribbon synapses coalesce at the bottom of hair cells are not well understood. The authors addressed this question by leveraging the highly-tractable zebrafish lateral line neuromast, which exhibits a small number of visible hair cells, easily observed in time-lapse imaging. The approach combined genetics, pharmacological manipulations, high-resolution imaging, and careful quantifications. The manuscript commences with a developmental time course of ribbon synapse development, characterizing both immature and mature ribbon bodies (defined by position in the hair cell, apical vs. basal). Next, the authors show convincing (and frankly mesmerizing) imaging data of plus end-directed microtubule trafficking toward the basal end of the hair cells, and data highlighting the directed motion of ribbon bodies. The authors then use a series of pharmacological and genetic manipulations showing the role of microtubule stability and one particular kinesin (Kif1aa) in the transport and fusion of ribbon bodies, which is presumably a prerequisite for hair cell synaptic transmission. The data suggest that microtubules and their stability are necessary for normal numbers of mature ribbons and that Kif1aa is likely required for fusion events associated with ribbon maturation. Overall, the data provide a new and interesting story on ribbon synapse dynamics.

Strengths:

(1) The manuscript offers a comprehensive Introduction and Discussion sections that will inform generalists and specialists.

(2) The use of Airyscan imaging in living samples to view and measure microtubule and ribbon dynamics in vivo represents a strength. With rigorous quantification and thoughtful analyses, the authors generate datasets often only obtained in cultured cells or more diminutive animal models (e.g., C. elegans).

(3) The number of biological replicates and the statistical analyses are strong. The combination of pharmacology and genetic manipulations also represents strong rigor.

(4) One of the most important strengths is that the manuscript and data spur on other questions - namely, do (or how do) ribbon bodies attach to Kinesin proteins? Also, and as noted in the Discussion, do hair cell activity and subsequent intracellular calcium rises facilitate ribbon transport/fusion?

Weaknesses:

(1) Neither the data or the Discussion address a direct or indirect link between Kinesins and ribbon bodies. Showing Kif1aa protein in proximity to the ribbon bodies would add strength.

(2) Neither the data or Discussion address the functional consequences of loss of Kif1aa or ribbon transport. Presumably, both manipulations would reduce afferent excitation.

(3) It is unknown whether the drug treatments or genetic manipulations are specific to hair cells, so we can't know for certain whether any phenotypic defects are secondary.

Reviewer #3 (Public Review):

Summary:

The manuscript uses live imaging to study the role of microtubules in the movement of ribeye aggregates in neuromast hair cells in zebrafish. The main findings are that
(1) Ribeye aggregates, assumed to be ribbon precursors, move in a directed motion toward the active zone;
(2) Disruption of microtubules and kif1aa increases the number of ribeye aggregates and decreases the number of mature synapses.

The evidence for point 2 is compelling, while the evidence for point 1 is less convincing. In particular, the directed motion conclusion is dependent upon fitting of mean squared displacement that can be prone to error and variance to do stochasticity, which is not accounted for in the analysis. Only a small subset of the aggregates meet this criteria and one wonders whether the focus on this subset misses the bigger picture of what is happening with the majority of spots.

Strengths:

(1) The effects of Kif1aa removal and nocodozole on ribbon precursor number and size are convincing and novel.

(2) The live imaging of Ribeye aggregate dynamics provides interesting insight into ribbon formation. The movies showing the fusion of ribeye spots are convincing and the demonstrated effects of nocodozole and kif1aa removal on the frequency of these events is novel.

(3) The effect of nocodozole and kif1aa removal on precursor fusion is novel and interesting.

(4) The quality of the data is extremely high and the results are interesting.

Weaknesses:

(1) To image ribeye aggregates, the investigators overexpressed Ribeye-a TAGRFP under the control of a MyoVI promoter. While it is understandable why they chose to do the experiments this way, expression is not under the same transcriptional regulation as the native protein, and some caution is warranted in drawing some conclusions. For example, the reduction in the number of puncta with maturity may partially reflect the regulation of the MyoVI promoter with hair cell maturity. Similarly, it is unknown whether overexpression has the potential to saturate binding sites (for example motors), which could influence mobility.

(2) The examples of punctae colocalizing with microtubules look clear (Figures 1 F-G), but the presentation is anecdotal. It would be better and more informative, if quantified.

(3) It appears that any directed transport may be rare. Simply having an alpha >1 is not sufficient to declare movement to be directed (motor-driven transport typically has an alpha approaching 2). Due to the randomness of a random walk and errors in fits in imperfect data will yield some spread in movement driven by Brownian motion. Many of the tracks in Figure 3H look as though they might be reasonably fit by a straight line (i.e. alpha = 1).

(4) The "directed motion" shown here does not really resemble motor-driven transport observed in other systems (axonal transport, for example) even in the subset that has been picked out as examples here. While the role of microtubules and kif1aa in synapse maturation is strong, it seems likely that this role may be something non-canonical (which would be interesting).

(5) The effect of acute treatment with nocodozole on microtubules in movie 7 and Figure 6 is not obvious to me and it is clear that whatever effect it has on microtubules is incomplete.

Author response:

Public Reviews:

Reviewer #1 (Public Review):

Summary:

The manuscript by Hussain and collaborators aims at deciphering the microtubule-dependent ribbon formation in zebrafish hair cells. By using confocal imaging, pharmacology tools, and zebrafish mutants, the group of Katie Kindt convincingly demonstrated that ribbon, the organelle that concentrates glutamate-filled vesicles at the hair cell synapse, originates from the fusion of precursors that move along the microtubule network. This study goes hand in hand with a complementary paper (Voorn et al.) showing similar results in mouse hair cells.

Strengths:

This study clearly tracked the dynamics of the microtubules, and those of the microtubule-associated ribbons and demonstrated fusion ribbon events. In addition, the authors have identified the critical role of kinesin Kif1aa in the fusion events. The results are compelling and the images and movies are magnificent.

Weaknesses:

The lack of functional data regarding the role of Kif1aa. Although it is difficult to probe and interpret the behavior of zebrafish after nocodazole treatment, I wonder whether deletion of kif1aa in hair cells may result in a functional deficit that could be easily tested in zebrafish?

We have examined functional deficits in kif1aa mutants in another paper David et al. 2024. In Submission, preprint available:

https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.05.20.595037v1

In addition to playing a role in ribbon fusions, Kif1aa is also responsible for enriching glutamate-filled secretory vesicles at the presynaptic active zone. In kif1aa mutants (and crispants), vesicles are no longer localized to the hair cell base, and there is a reduction in the number of vesicles associated with presynaptic ribbons. Kif1aa mutants also have functional defects including reductions in spontaneous vesicle release and evoked postsynaptic calcium responses. Behaviorally, kif1aa mutants exhibit impaired rheotaxis, indicating defects in the lateral-line system and an inability to accurately detect water flow. Since our paper focuses on microtubule-associated ribbon movement and dynamics early in hair cell development, we have only discussed the effects of Kif1aa directly related to ribbon dynamics during this time window in this paper. In our revision, we will reference this recently submitted work.

Impact:

The synaptogenesis in the auditory sensory cell remains still elusive. Here, this study indicates that the formation of the synaptic organelle is a dynamic process involving the fusion of presynaptic elements. This study will undoubtedly boost a new line of research aimed at identifying the specific molecular determinants that target ribbon precursors to the synapse and govern the fusion process.

Reviewer #2 (Public Review):

Summary:

In this manuscript, the authors set out to resolve a long-standing mystery in the field of sensory biology - how large, presynaptic bodies called "ribbon synapses" migrate to the basolateral end of hair cells. The ribbon synapse is found in sensory hair cells and photoreceptors, and is a critical structural feature of a readily-releasable pool of glutamate that excites postsynaptic afferent neurons. For decades, we have known these structures exist, but the mechanisms that control how ribbon synapses coalesce at the bottom of hair cells are not well understood. The authors addressed this question by leveraging the highly-tractable zebrafish lateral line neuromast, which exhibits a small number of visible hair cells, easily observed in time-lapse imaging. The approach combined genetics, pharmacological manipulations, high-resolution imaging, and careful quantifications. The manuscript commences with a developmental time course of ribbon synapse development, characterizing both immature and mature ribbon bodies (defined by position in the hair cell, apical vs. basal). Next, the authors show convincing (and frankly mesmerizing) imaging data of plus end-directed microtubule trafficking toward the basal end of the hair cells, and data highlighting the directed motion of ribbon bodies. The authors then use a series of pharmacological and genetic manipulations showing the role of microtubule stability and one particular kinesin (Kif1aa) in the transport and fusion of ribbon bodies, which is presumably a prerequisite for hair cell synaptic transmission. The data suggest that microtubules and their stability are necessary for normal numbers of mature ribbons and that Kif1aa is likely required for fusion events associated with ribbon maturation. Overall, the data provide a new and interesting story on ribbon synapse dynamics.

Strengths:

(1) The manuscript offers a comprehensive Introduction and Discussion sections that will inform generalists and specialists.

(2) The use of Airyscan imaging in living samples to view and measure microtubule and ribbon dynamics in vivo represents a strength. With rigorous quantification and thoughtful analyses, the authors generate datasets often only obtained in cultured cells or more diminutive animal models (e.g., C. elegans).

(3) The number of biological replicates and the statistical analyses are strong. The combination of pharmacology and genetic manipulations also represents strong rigor.

(4) One of the most important strengths is that the manuscript and data spur on other questions - namely, do (or how do) ribbon bodies attach to Kinesin proteins? Also, and as noted in the Discussion, do hair cell activity and subsequent intracellular calcium rises facilitate ribbon transport/fusion?

These are important strengths and we do plan to investigate adaptors and how hair cell activity impacts ribbon fusion and transport in the future!

Weaknesses:

(1) Neither the data or the Discussion address a direct or indirect link between Kinesins and ribbon bodies. Showing Kif1aa protein in proximity to the ribbon bodies would add strength.

This is a great point, and we are working to create a transgenic line with fluorescently labelled Kif1aa to directly visualize its association with ribbons. At present, we have not obtained a transgenic line, and localization of Kif1aa and ribbons in live hair cells it is beyond the scope of this paper. In our revision we will discuss this caveat.

(2) Neither the data or Discussion address the functional consequences of loss of Kif1aa or ribbon transport. Presumably, both manipulations would reduce afferent excitation.

Excellent point. Please see the response above to Reviewer #1 weaknesses.

(3) It is unknown whether the drug treatments or genetic manipulations are specific to hair cells, so we can't know for certain whether any phenotypic defects are secondary.

This is correct and is a caveat of our Kif1aa and drug experiments. However, to mitigate this in the pharmacological experiments, we have done the drug treatments at 3 different timescales: long-term (overnight), short-term (4 hr) and fast (30 min) treatments. The faster experiment done after 30 min drug treatment is where we observe reduced directional motion and fusions. This later experiment should not be affected by any long-term changes or developmental defects that could be caused by the drugs as hair cell development occurs over 8-12 hrs. However, we acknowledge that these treatments and genetic experiments could have secondary phenotypic defects that are not hair-cell specific. In our revision, we will discuss these issues.

Reviewer #3 (Public Review):

Summary:

The manuscript uses live imaging to study the role of microtubules in the movement of ribeye aggregates in neuromast hair cells in zebrafish. The main findings are that

(1) Ribeye aggregates, assumed to be ribbon precursors, move in a directed motion toward the active zone;

(2) Disruption of microtubules and kif1aa increases the number of ribeye aggregates and decreases the number of mature synapses.

The evidence for point 2 is compelling, while the evidence for point 1 is less convincing. In particular, the directed motion conclusion is dependent upon fitting of mean squared displacement that can be prone to error and variance to do stochasticity, which is not accounted for in the analysis. Only a small subset of the aggregates meet this criteria and one wonders whether the focus on this subset misses the bigger picture of what is happening with the majority of spots.

Strengths:

(1) The effects of Kif1aa removal and nocodozole on ribbon precursor number and size are convincing and novel.

(2) The live imaging of Ribeye aggregate dynamics provides interesting insight into ribbon formation. The movies showing the fusion of ribeye spots are convincing and the demonstrated effects of nocodozole and kif1aa removal on the frequency of these events is novel.

(3) The effect of nocodozole and kif1aa removal on precursor fusion is novel and interesting.

(4) The quality of the data is extremely high and the results are interesting.

Weaknesses:

(1) To image ribeye aggregates, the investigators overexpressed Ribeye-a TAGRFP under the control of a MyoVI promoter. While it is understandable why they chose to do the experiments this way, expression is not under the same transcriptional regulation as the native protein, and some caution is warranted in drawing some conclusions. For example, the reduction in the number of puncta with maturity may partially reflect the regulation of the MyoVI promoter with hair cell maturity. Similarly, it is unknown whether overexpression has the potential to saturate binding sites (for example motors), which could influence mobility.

We agree that overexpression in transgenic lines is a common issue and would have loved to do these experiments with endogenously expressed fluorescent proteins under a native promoter. However, this was not technically possible for us. We originally characterized several transgenic Ribeye lines in the past to ensure they have normal ribbon numbers and size (myo6b:ribb-mcherry, myo6b:riba-tagRFP and myo6b:riba-GFP) - in 2014. Unfortunately, we no longer have the raw data from this analysis. In our revision, we will repeat our immunolabel on myo6b:riba-tagRFP transgenic fish and examine ribbon numbers and size and show what impact (or not) exogenous Ribeye expression has on ribbon formation.

(2) The examples of punctae colocalizing with microtubules look clear (Figures 1 F-G), but the presentation is anecdotal. It would be better and more informative, if quantified.

We attempted a co-localization study between microtubules and ribbons but decided not to move forward with it due to several issues:

(1) Hair cells have an extremely crowded environment, especially since the nucleus occupies the majority of the cell. All proteins are pushed together in the small space surrounding the nucleus and hence co-localization is not meaningful because the distances are so small.

(2) We also attempted to segment microtubules in these images and quantify how many ribbons were associated with microtubules, but 3D microtubule segmentation was not accurate in these hair cells due to highly varying filament intensities, and diffuse cytoplasmic tubulin signal.

Therefore, we decided that a better measure of ribbon-microtubule association would be a demonstration that individual ribbons keep their association with microtubules over time (in our time lapses), rather than a co-localization study. We see that ribbons localize to microtubules in all our timelapses, including the examples shown. We observed that if a ribbon dissociates, it is just to switch from one filament to another. We have not observed free-floating ribbons in our study.

(3) It appears that any directed transport may be rare. Simply having an alpha >1 is not sufficient to declare movement to be directed (motor-driven transport typically has an alpha approaching 2). Due to the randomness of a random walk and errors in fits in imperfect data will yield some spread in movement driven by Brownian motion. Many of the tracks in Figure 3H look as though they might be reasonably fit by a straight line (i.e. alpha = 1).

As we have stated in the paper, we only see a small subset of the ribbon precursors moving directionally. The majority of the ribbons are stationary. We cannot say for sure what is happening with the stationary ribbons, but our hypothesis is that these ribbons eventually exhibit directed motion. This idea is supported by the fact that we have seen ribbons that are stationary begin movement, and ribbons that are moving come to a stop during the acquisition of our timelapses. The ribbons that are stationary may not have enough motors attached, or they may be in a sort of ‘seeding’ phase where the ribeye protein could be condensing on the ribbon. We have discussed the possibility of ribbons being biomolecular condensates in our Discussion.

In our revision we will discuss why ribbon transport does not resemble typical motor-driven transport (also see response to point 4 below). We will also reexamine our MSD data in more detail as suggested by Reviewer 3 and provide distributions of alpha values in our revision.

(4) The "directed motion" shown here does not really resemble motor-driven transport observed in other systems (axonal transport, for example) even in the subset that has been picked out as examples here. While the role of microtubules and kif1aa in synapse maturation is strong, it seems likely that this role may be something non-canonical (which would be interesting).

One major difference between axonal and ribbon transport is that microtubules are very stable and linear in axonal transport. Therefore, the directed motion observed is ‘canonical’. In hair cells, the microtubules are extremely dynamic, especially towards the hair cell base. Within a single time frame (60-100 s), we see the network changing (moving and branching). This dynamic network adds another layer of complexity onto the motion of the ribbon, as the filament track itself is changing. Therefore, we see a lot of stalling, filament switching, and reversals of ribbon movement in our movies. However, we have demonstrated in our movies as well as using MSD analysis, that a subset of ribbons exhibit directional motion. In our revision we will discuss why directed motion in hair cells does not resemble canonical motor-driven transport in axons.

(5) The effect of acute treatment with nocodozole on microtubules in movie 7 and Figure 6 is not obvious to me and it is clear that whatever effect it has on microtubules is incomplete.

When using Nocodazole, it is important to optimize the concentration of the drug such that there is minimal cytotoxicity, while still being effective. Microtubules in the apical region of hair cells are very stable and do not respond well to Nocodazole treatment at concentrations that are tolerable to hair cells. While a few stable filaments remain largely at the cell apex, there are almost no filaments at the hair cell base, which is different from the wild-type hair cells. In addition, Nocodazole-treated hair cells have more cytoplasmic YFP-tubulin signal compared to wild type. We will add additional images and quantification in our revision to illustrate these points.

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  2. Wellcome Trust
  3. Max-Planck-Gesellschaft
  4. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation