Neuronal function requires axon-dendrite membrane polarity, which depends on sorting of membrane traffic during entry into axons. Due to a microtubule network of mixed polarity, dendrites receive vesicles from the cell body without apparent capacity for directional sorting. We found that, during entry into dendrites, axonally destined cargos move with a retrograde bias toward the cell body, while dendritically destined cargos are biased in the anterograde direction. A microtubule-associated septin (SEPT9), which localizes specifically in dendrites, impedes axonal cargo of kinesin-1/KIF5 and boosts kinesin-3/KIF1 motor cargo further into dendrites. In neurons and in vitro single-molecule motility assays, SEPT9 suppresses kinesin-1/KIF5 and enhances kinesin-3/KIF1 in a manner that depends on a lysine-rich loop of the kinesin motor domain. This differential regulation impacts partitioning of neuronal membrane proteins into axons-dendrites. Thus, polarized membrane traffic requires sorting during entry into dendrites by a septin-mediated mechanism that bestows directional bias on microtubules of mixed orientation.
In the originally published version of this article, the landing rate units in Figures 4A, 6A, and 7E, as well as in the Quantification and Statistical Analysis section of the STAR Methods under the ''In Vitro Motor Motility'' subheading, were erroneously noted as ''events mm À1 s À1 '' rather than as ''events mm À1 min À1 '' due to mistaken changes made at the proof stage.
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