Mechanisms that regulate axon branch stability are largely unknown. Genome-wide analyses of Rho GTPase activating protein (RhoGAP) function in Drosophila using RNA interference identified
p190 RhoGAP as essential for axon stability in mushroom body neurons, the olfactory learning and memory center.
p190 inactivation leads to axon branch retraction, a phenotype mimicked by activation of GTPase RhoA and its effector kinase Drok and modulated by the level and phosphorylation of myosin regulatory light chain. Thus, there exists a retraction pathway from RhoA to myosin in maturing neurons, which is normally repressed by
p190. Local regulation of
p190 could control the structural plasticity of neurons. Indeed, genetic evidence supports negative regulation of
p190 by integrin and Src, both implicated in neural plasticity.