Researchers at Münster University show in the fruit fly how mechanical tearing cuts neural connections
Nerve cells communicate with one another via long processes known as axons and dendrites, or, more generally, neurites. During development, these processes first grow and form connections with other cells, for example synapses with other nerve cells. Any neurites which are not properly linked, or are no longer needed, are removed by a corrective mechanism known as “pruning”. Such pruning processes can appear drastic, and neurites sometimes seem to be severed directly from the nerve cell. Researchers headed by Dr. Sebastian Rumpf from the Institute of Neuro- and Behavioral Biology at Münster University has now found the mechanism of neurite severing. In a study published in the Journal of Cell Biology, the team show that in sensory nerve cells of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, pruning occurs through mechanical tearing.