Frontiers in molecular biosciences
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We previously reported that the pseudophosphatase MK-STYX (mitogen activated kinase phosphoserine/threonine/tyrosine binding protein) dramatically increases the number of what appeared to be primary neurites in rat pheochromocytoma (PC-12) cells; however, the question remained whether these MK-STYX-induced outgrowths were bona fide neurites, and formed synapses. Here, we report that microtubules and microfilaments, components of the cytoskeleton that are involved in the formation of neurites, are present in MK-STYX-induced outgrowths. In addition, in response to nerve growth factor (NGF), MK-STYX-expressing cells produced more growth cones than non-MK-STYX-expressing cells, further supporting a model in which MK-STYX has a role in actin signaling. ⋯ A significant number of primary neurons in the presence of MK-STYX had more than the normal number of primary neurites. Our data illustrate the novel findings that MK-STYX induces outgrowths in PC-12 cells that fit the criteria for neurites, have a greater number of growth cones, form synapses, and have pre-synaptic and post-synaptic properties. It also highlights that the pseudophosphatase MK-STYX significantly alters the morphology of primary neurons.