[No authors listed]
Intramuscular motor innervation is an essential process in neuromuscular development. Recently, mutations in COL25A1, encoding CLAC-P/collagen XXV, have been linked to the development of a congenital cranial dysinnervation disorder (CCDD). Yet the molecular mechanisms of intramuscular innervation and the etiology of CCDD related to COL25A1 have remained elusive. Here, we report that muscle-derived collagen XXV is indispensable for intramuscular innervation. In developing skeletal muscles, Col25a1 expression is tightly regulated by muscle excitation. In vitro and cell-based assays reveal a direct interaction between collagen XXV and receptor protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) Ï and δ. Motor explant assays show that expression of collagen XXV in target cells attracts motor axons, but this is inhibited by exogenous PTPÏ/δ. CCDD mutations attenuate motor axon attraction by reducing collagen XXV-PTPÏ/δ interaction. Overall, our study identifies PTPÏ/δ as putative receptors for collagen XXV, implicating collagen XXV and PTPÏ/δ in intramuscular innervation and a developmental ocular motor disorder.
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