The protein GIT-1 (G-protein-coupled receptor kinase interacting ArfGAP 1) is a GTPase activating protein (GAP) for the Arf small GTP-binding proteins, and a focal-adhesion-based scaffold, with over 100 associated proteins. GIT-1 has been linked to dendritic spine formation and synaptic changes in rodent hippocampus, as well as impairment in fear response and learning. It has also been implicated in Huntington's disease, Schizophrenia, and ADHD (reviewed in Zhou et al., 2016). In order to study the effects of
git-1 on dendritic morphology, we use C. elegans and its stereotypically-arborized polymodal neuron PVD (Oren-Suissa et al., 2010) and follow its dendritic arborization pattern and associated behavioral outputs. We found that while
git-1 mutants display normal PVD neuron morphology in L4 stage, this is followed by a significant increase in tertiary and quaternary ectopic branches during early adulthood. Thus,
git-1 is necessary for dendritic maintenance, but not morphogenesis. To reveal the signaling pathway mediating this effect, we tested mutants of the GIT-1 primary binding partner PIX (
p21-activated kinase [PAK]-interacting exchange factor) and its downstream kinase PAK. We found that both
pix-1 and
pak-1 mutants have a similar, yet milder, phenotype in adult PVD morphology, suggesting that
git-1 acts as a negative regulator of tertiary and quaternary branch arborization partly through the PIX-PAK signaling pathway. The behavioral phenotypes associated with
git-1 were tested by movement analysis and a harsh touch response assay, where we show that two
git-1 mutant alleles display increased speed and body wavelength, with one allele also displaying a mild mechanosensory defect. These results open a possibility for a novel dendritic maintenance pathway, which may influence proprioceptive faculties in the worm.