In the vertebrate cerebellum, Purkinje cells (PCs) make highly branched dendrites that are remarkable for their restriction to a single, parasagittal plane. The dendrites connect to perpendicular parallel fibres of cerebellar granule cell (GC) axons, which form before them in development and are thought to be required for dendrite planarity. However, the molecular control of dendritic branching remains incompletely understood. Now Kazuto Fujishima and colleagues reveal a crucial role for the βIII spectrin subunit in PC dendrite development (spectrins are cytoskeletal scaffolds that line the inside of the cell membrane and bind actin). Cell-autonomous βIII spectrin knockdown leads to PC dendrites extending away from the main plane. When plated on electrospun nanofibres, GC axons run parallel to aligned fibres, whereas PC dendrites grow in a perpendicular direction. This perpendicular bias is lost following βIII spectrin knockdown; αII spectrin knockdown had similar effects. Time-lapse imaging reveals that biased dendritic growth leads to PC perpendicular orientation, and lateral branching increases following βIII spectrin knockdown. As seen in vivo, plated PCs show dense protrusions covering the lateral surface of the dendritic shaft; these protrusions are misshapen in βIII spectrin knockdown cells, and both actin localisation and microtubule polymerisation are aberrantly enriched in them. Finally, spinocerebellar ataxia type 5-associated βIII spectrin mutations disrupt dendritic orientation, both in vivo and in vitro. Thus, βIII spectrin crucially controls the planar branching of PC dendrites.
βIII spectrin helps Purkinje cell dendrites stay in their plane
βIII spectrin helps Purkinje cell dendrites stay in their plane. Development 15 December 2020; 147 (24): e2401. doi:
Download citation file:
Advertisement
Cited by
Interviews with Biologists @ 100 conference speakers

Explore our interviews with keynote speakers from the Biologists @ 100 conference, hosted to celebrate our publisher’s 100th anniversary, where we discuss climate change and biodiversity with Hans-Otto Pörtner and Jane Francis, health and disease with Charles Swanton and Sadaf Farooqi, and emerging technologies with Manu Prakash and Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz.
Call for papers – Lifelong Development: the Maintenance, Regeneration and Plasticity of Tissues

Development invites you to submit your latest research to our upcoming special issue – Lifelong Development: the Maintenance, Regeneration and Plasticity of Tissues. This issue will be coordinated by Guest Editors Meritxell Huch (Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Germany) and Mansi Srivastava (Harvard University and Museum of Comparative Zoology, USA), working alongside our team of academic Editors. Submit your articles by 30 May 2025.
A case for broadening our view of mechanism in developmental biology

In this Perspective, B. Duygu Özpolat and colleagues survey researchers on their views on what it takes to infer mechanism in developmental biology. They examine what factors shape our idea of what we mean by ‘mechanism’ and suggest a path forward that embraces a broad outlook on the diversity of studies that advance knowledge in our field.
In preprints
Did you know that Development publishes perspectives on recent preprints? These articles help our readers navigate the ever-growing preprint literature. Together with our preprint highlights service, preLights, these perspectives help our readers navigate the ever-growing preprint literature. We welcome proposals for ‘In preprints’ articles, so please do get in touch if you’d like to contribute.
the Node: Have your say

Our community site, the Node, is conducting a user survey about the content and the design of the site. Help us shape the Node's future and thank you for being a part of the Node over the last 15 years.