Axonal fusion is an efficient regenerative process that restores neuronal function post-injury. It is a highly specific mechanism whereby a regrowing axon reconnects and fuses with its severed segment, restoring cytoplasmic and membrane integrity, and preventing the degeneration of the detached segment. While synaptic vesicle recycling has been linked to axonal regeneration, its role in axonal fusion remains largely unknown. Dynamin proteins are large GTPases that hydrolyse lipid binding membranes to carry out clathrin-mediated synaptic vesicle recycling. The role of dynamin in endocytosis was first discovered in Drosophila melanogaster, with disruption of the dynamin-like shibire gene causing blockage of synaptic vesicle transport in this species. In C. elegans, the dynamin-related protein DYN-1 functions in apoptotic cell clearance by mediating a signalling pathway involving the ABC transporter CED-7, as well as the transmembrane receptor CED-1/LRP1 and its intracellular adapter CED-6/GULP in the engulfing cell. CED-7 and CED-6 were previously reported to be important for axonal fusion, functioning to mediate the reconnection between separated axon segments. Thus, we hypothesized that DYN-1 may also be necessary for axonal fusion. To test this, we conducted UV-laser axotomy and analysed axonal regeneration in the posterior lateral microtubule neurons (PLMs) in animals carrying the temperature-sensitive
dyn-1(
ky51) allele. We show that disruption of DYN-1 function by raising animals at higher, restrictive temperatures (20oC and 25oC) leads to dramatically reduced levels of axonal fusion. Importantly, we demonstrate that these defects are reversible at lower, permissive temperatures, with the level of axonal fusion being restored to wild-type levels at 15oC. Quantification of the length of regrowth under these conditions has revealed no defect in
dyn-1 mutants compared to wild-type animals at 15 deg C and 20 deg C but showed a significant defect at 25 deg C. Furthermore, we find that DYN-1 activity is only required from 16 hours post-axotomy for neuronal repair. Together, these results establish important roles for DYN-1 in regulating axonal regrowth and fusion.