Maintenance of neuronal integrity is essential for the preservation of correct neuronal function. Sensory neurons and their axons are subject to continuous mechanical stress due to their location within the skin, muscles, and moveable joints. Despite the strong forces experienced, these neurons are able to maintain their structure and functional circuitry. The ability to resist strain has been shown to be a combination of intrinsic and extrinsic protection mechanisms, but the precise interplay between cell autonomous and cell-non-autonomous stress resistance is not known. Mutations in C. elegans beta -spectrin/unc-70 cause spontaneous axonal breakage due to mechanical strain. Through an unbiased forward genetic screen using
unc-70 mutants as a sensitised background, we have identified a novel mutant allele of the conserved gene
tbc-10, which results in enhanced axonal damage to the PLM mechanosensory neuron. TBC-10 is a Rab-GTPase-activating protein that we demonstrate localises to the membrane of the hypodermis surrounding the PLM axon and functions non-cell-autonomously within this tissue to exert an axonal protective effect via inactivation of the conserved small GTP-ase RAB-35. Inactivation of RAB-35 within the hypodermis, by either expression of a GDP-locked RAB-35 or a loss of function mutation, is sufficient to rescue the enhanced axonal breakage phenotype in
tbc-10 mutants. We show that in C. elegans the epidermis acts to protect the axons of mechanosensory neurons from spontaneous degeneration induced by disruption of the spectrin network, demonstrating a crucial role for non-neuronal support cells in maintaining an intact and functional nervous system.