Astrocytes are essential for neuronal homeostasis, and synaptic modulation and development. While astrocytes exhibit distinct Ca2+ signaling patterns, decoding their physiological roles remains challenging because conventional approaches generate nonphysiological, spatially imprecise Ca2+ surges that obscure endogenous signals. Here, we developed a tunable light-based tool to modulate astrocytic Ca2+ activity, mimicking localized spikes and global waves elicited by graded glutamate through endogenous mGluR-Gq-IP3R signaling. IP3R triple knockout abolished light-evoked Ca2+ elevations, indicating elevated Ca2+ requires ER-IP3Rs. Using this modulation platform, we found that local Ca2+ spikes enhance organelle entry into astrocytic processes, whereas global Ca2+ waves arrest organelle movement. FKBP-FRB motor recruitment assays showed that global Ca2+ elevations acutely suppress motor-driven transport when cargo adaptors are bypassed. Combining our method with astrocyte process outgrowth analysis showed that Ca2+-dependent distal organelle accumulation promotes process elongation. Together, this light-based strategy provides a versatile platform for eliciting endogenous-like astrocytic Ca2+ patterns and reveals how distinct Ca2+ patterns differentially control organelle dynamics and astrocytic structural remodeling.
Introduction
Astrocytes are morphologically polarized cells that form extensive networks by extending highly branched, intertwining processes throughout the brain. These processes provide structural and functional support for neuronal functions, such as modulating synaptic activity by encasing synapses to stabilize pre- and postsynaptic connections or removing excess neurotransmitters. Astrocyte networks also play a critical role in maintaining the blood–brain barrier by establishing contacts with the surrounding vasculature (Abbott et al., 2006; Allen and Eroglu, 2017; Rangel-Gomez et al., 2024). Notably, pathological states such as obsessive–compulsive disorder are accompanied by reduced astrocyte territory areas in brain tissues, due to diminished branching and process length (Baldwin et al., 2024; Octeau et al., 2018; Soto et al., 2023), underscoring the link between astrocyte morphology and functional competence.
Similar to neurons with long axons and dendrites, astrocytes distribute essential organelles (e.g., mitochondria, signaling vesicles) throughout their elaborate processes (Aten et al., 2022; Haseleu et al., 2013). In cultured neurons, studies have established that the spatial distribution of organelles, such as mitochondria and lysosomes, is critical for axon growth (van Bergeijk et al., 2015; Wiederhold, 2021). This raises the premise that subcellular distribution of organelles within astrocytic processes may similarly govern process formation and extension.
Organelle distribution across cell types is governed by microtubule-based transport, coordinated by kinesin and dynein motors (Cason and Holzbaur, 2022), along with their associated adaptor proteins and posttranslational modifiers (Debattisti et al., 2017; Modica et al., 2017; Pekkurnaz et al., 2014; Raiborg et al., 2015; Reck-Peterson et al., 2018; Yildiz, 2025). In neurons, this system ensures long-distance somatic-to-distal organelle delivery. Disruptions in this process, such as impaired lysosomal or mitochondrial trafficking, are implicated in neurodegenerative disorders (e.g., Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s) and defective axon regeneration (Baloh et al., 2007; Roney et al., 2022; Wiederhold, 2021). Central to this regulation is Ca2+, a key modulator of organelle motility. For example, Ca2+ controls mitochondrial movement via the Miro1–Milton complex and lysosome positioning via the dynein–TRPML1 interaction (Li et al., 2016; Liu and Hajnóczky, 2009; MacAskill et al., 2009; Saotome et al., 2008; Wang and Schwarz, 2009), highlighting the importance of Ca2+ in neuronal trafficking.
Astrocytic Ca2+ signaling is well documented in modulating organismal behaviors, as exemplified by radial astrocyte Ca2+ surges, which drive behavioral transition from active swimming to passive “giving up” in zebrafish (Mu et al., 2019), or striatal Ca2+ attenuation, which causes anxiety-like self-grooming in mice (Yu et al., 2018). However, its subcellular coordination of organelle dynamics remains largely unexplored. Astrocytes critically rely on Ca2+-dependent organelle dynamics at their processes to support synaptic connectivity and metabolic homeostasis (Agarwal et al., 2017; Dunn et al., 2013; Liu et al., 2011; Straub et al., 2006), yet how Ca2+-dependent trafficking mechanisms analogous to those described in neurons operate in astrocytes is not known.
Astrocytic Ca2+ signals largely rely on Ca2+ release from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) through inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors (IP3Rs), which are activated downstream of Gq-coupled neurotransmitter and neuromodulator receptors via the canonical PLC-IP3 pathway (Denizot et al., 2019; Goenaga et al., 2023). This ER-based IP3R signaling produces robust intracellular Ca2+ elevations in astrocytes and presents a major mechanism by which astrocytes respond to neuronal activity and modulate synaptic function (Goenaga et al., 2023). Recent high-resolution single-cell and 3D in vivo imaging analyses in mice have further revealed that astrocytes exhibit diverse spatiotemporal patterns, including localized microdomain events and cell-wide Ca2+ elevations (Bindocci et al., 2017; Semyanov et al., 2020). These observations raise a key question: whether and how distinct local and global Ca2+ patterns regulate organelle transport and distribution within astrocytic processes?
Addressing this question requires overcoming two major technical challenges. First, simultaneous high-resolution imaging of Ca2+ signaling and organelle dynamics is required to capture their real-time interplay. Second, physiologically precise manipulation of Ca2+ signaling is needed to avoid artifacts. Monitoring rapid organelle movement in intact tissue is hampered by crowding cellular environment and limited imaging resolution. Current fixed-tissue approaches only provide static snapshots of organelle localization (Haseleu et al., 2013), failing to resolve dynamic transport kinetics. Recent advances in culturing astrocytes that retain native morphology and Ca2+ signaling properties (Wolfes et al., 2017) now offer a tractable platform for such investigations. For the second challenge, conventional pharmacological and optogenetic methods often generate nonphysiological Ca2+ surges with poor spatial precision, resulting in potentially artificial cellular responses and misinterpretation of Ca2+ roles in organelle dynamics. As shown by Shigetomi et al. (2008), astrocytic Ca2+ signaling encodes functional specificity through nuanced changes in amplitude, frequency, and spatial spread within cellular compartments, rather than binary on/off states. Replicating this physiological complexity demands tight spatiotemporal control.
In this study, we developed a light-based Ca2+ modulation method using mercury lamp illumination in primary cultured astrocytes. By quantifying Ca2+ dynamics with Astrocyte Quantitative Analysis (AQuA) (Wang et al., 2019), we show that brief and prolonged illumination produces localized spikes and global waves, respectively, with physiologically relevant amplitudes, frequencies, and spatial profiles. We further compared these light-evoked Ca2+ patterns with those elicited by glutamate acting on endogenous mGluR-Gq-IP3R signaling, demonstrating that low versus high glutamate concentrations reproduce similar local and global Ca2+ activations. IP3R triple knockout and Ca2+-free solution further demonstrated that these light-evoked Ca2+ signals require ER-resident IP3Rs and mainly arise from intracellular Ca2+ stores.
Combining this Ca2+ modulation platform with live-cell imaging, we systematically analyzed how these two Ca2+ patterns regulate organelle transport in astrocytes. Strikingly, local Ca2+ spikes accelerated organelle movement into astrocytic processes, while global Ca2+ waves arrested organelle movement. This dual regulatory mechanism therefore links pattern-specific Ca2+ signals to opposite transport outcomes. Integration of FKBP-FRB motor recruitment assays with our light-based system showed that global Ca2+ waves can acutely suppress transport driven by kinesin and dynein/dynactin even when cargo adaptors are bypassed, thereby narrowing the site of Ca2+-sensitive regulation to the level of the motor complexes. Astrocyte process outgrowth analysis further linked Ca2+-driven organelle trafficking to distal ends and enhanced process elongation. Collectively, the integration of precise Ca2+ manipulation and multimodal live-cell readouts provides an experimental framework for dissecting how distinct Ca2+ signaling modes influence organelle dynamics and astrocyte morphogenesis.
Results
Mercury lamp illumination induces differential Ca2+ signaling patterns in astrocytes
Endogenous Ca2+ events in astrocytes exhibit two patterns, local spikes and global waves. We tracked these patterns in cultured rat AWESAM astrocytes (Wolfes et al., 2017) using the Airyscan Fast mode of the Zeiss 880 microscope. Current genetic and chemical manipulations alter overall Ca2+ levels but are typically unable to control the signal amplitude, duration, or recurrence, which are key factors influencing localized cellular activities. To address this limitation, we systematically analyzed organelle dynamics associated with diverse Ca2+ signaling patterns in astrocytes. Unexpectedly, we discovered that mercury lamp illumination, when optimized for light intensity, filters, and exposure duration, could induce Ca2+ signaling behaviors in astrocytes resembling endogenous patterns.
A 4-s single-round illumination protocol (7.3–9 mW, 38 GFP filter set, excitation BP 450/50, emission BP 510/50, EGFP filter for short; hereafter referred to as “Local” illumination protocol) induced local Ca2+ spikes in distal processes that resembled endogenous activity (Fig. 1 A and Video 1). In ∼80% of astrocytes, this protocol increased spike frequency by approximately twofold compared with baseline (Fig. 1 C and Video 1). In contrast, prolonged 10-s exposure at higher intensity (44–46 mW, EGFP filter; “Global” illumination protocol) triggered cell-wide Ca2+ waves spreading throughout the entire cell (Fig. 1 B and Video 2). Notably, these global events were typically preceded by multifocal Ca2+ spikes, rather than spontaneous propagation of localized Ca2+ signals (Video 2).
To quantitatively compare lamp-evoked and endogenous Ca2+ activity, we used the “AQuA” method (Wang et al., 2019). Under steady-state conditions, endogenous Ca2+ activity was restricted to discrete spatial hotspots. AQuA revealed that the 4-s illumination increased Ca2+ oscillation events by 1.5- to threefold, preserving the overall spatial distribution of hotspots (Fig. 1 C and Video 1). Approximately 80% of light-induced spikes originated from the same hotspots as the endogenous events (Fig. 1 D), with only ∼20% occurring at new sites (Fig. 1 E). Consistent with this, Fig. 1 F shows that in the same astrocyte, brief Local and Global illumination do not alter cell morphology, and a 4-min Z-projection integrates local spikes and global waves into a combined Ca2+ activity map. These results suggested that certain hotspots are more sensitive to light, enabling the induction of local Ca2+ spikes that faithfully mimic endogenous oscillation dynamics. Spike amplitudes under illumination closely resemble endogenous oscillations (Fig. S1 B). However, amplitudes varied across subcellular regions (e.g., branches, branchlets) within individual cells, as well as between the same sites in different cells (n = 5 cells, Fig. S1). Overall, these results suggest that brief illumination effectively increases local spike frequency while preserving endogenous amplitude characteristics.
A 10-s illumination (44–46 mW, EGFP filter) induced a significant, cell-wide Ca2+ elevation (Fig. 1 B and Video 2). In contrast, switching to a mCherry filter (28–30 mW, 31 mCherry filter set, excitation BP 565/30, emission BP 620/60) did not alter Ca2+ signaling (Fig. 1 G). To rule out the possibility that laser illumination during live-cell imaging (488 nm, 2.1% laser power) also triggers Ca2+ oscillations, we tested the effects of laser excitation. Even at double laser intensity (488 nm, 4.2% laser power), no significant changes in Ca2+ oscillation frequency or amplitude were observed (Fig. 1 H). Thus, Ca2+ elevation is not a generic consequence of imaging light or higher power but requires a specific wavelength/power combination.
Ca2+ elevations arise from intracellular stores
To identify the source of light-induced Ca2+ signals, we treated astrocytes with 2-aminoethyl diphenylborinate (2-APB), an inhibitor of IP3Rs, which are Ca2+ channels in the ER (Doengi et al., 2009). Lamp-induced increase in Ca2+ activity was completely abolished in 2-APB–treated but not vehicle-treated astrocytes (Fig. 2, A and B; and Videos 3 and 4), implying ER as the source of light-inducible Ca2+ signaling.
To test this genetically, we used primary astrocytes derived from triple-floxed Itpr1F/FItpr2F/FItpr3F/F conditional mice and induced acute IP3R deletion with TAT-Cre. This triple-floxed line has been validated for efficient Cre-dependent deletion of all three IP3R isoforms and functional loss of IP3R-mediated Ca2+ signaling in vascular smooth muscle cells in vivo (Huang et al., 2024). Newborn pups from this line were genotyped by PCR to confirm the floxed Itpr1/2/3 alleles (Fig. 2, C and D), and then used to prepare primary astrocyte cultures. Western blot confirmed that 7 days after Cre induction, IP3R1/2/3 protein levels are markedly reduced (Fig. 2, E and F). In the absence of IP3R1/2/3, mercury lamp illumination failed to elicit any detectable Ca2+ increase. As a control, cells from the same preparation without TAT-Cre maintain robust lamp-evoked local and global responses (Fig. 2, G–I and Video 5). These genetic results demonstrate that the Ca2+ response is strongly dependent on ER-resident IP3Rs and intracellular Ca2+ stores.
To further distinguish between Ca2+ influx and intracellular stores, we performed experiments in Ca2+-free media. After replacing the culture media with Ca2+-free solution and waiting for 5 min, we applied the same Local and Global illumination protocols in primary astrocytes. Under these conditions, both lamp-evoked local spikes and global waves still occurred (Fig. 2 J). Their frequency (events/min) was comparable to that observed in normal media on the same timescale (Fig. 2, K and L). These results indicate that the light-induced Ca2+ elevations primarily rely on intracellular Ca2+ stores rather than Ca2+ influx.
Absence of astrocyte toxicity compared with pharmacological treatments
To further investigate the impact of Ca2+ signaling on organelle transport and localization, we next evaluated potential cytotoxic effects of light exposure during live imaging. Widely used Ca2+ modulators, such as EGTA and thapsigargin, are known to alter Ca2+ levels and may induce cellular stress. EGTA chelates extracellular Ca2+, and thapsigargin inhibits the sarcoplasmic/ER Ca2+-ATPase, leading to chronically depleted ER Ca2+ stores. Morphological analysis of mCherry-labeled astrocytes revealed that chemical treatments caused process retraction, whereas mercury lamp illumination produced no detectable morphological changes compared with vehicle-treated controls (Fig. 2 M). These data demonstrate that lamp illumination can effectively activate diverse Ca2+ signaling patterns without apparent toxicity.
Light-based Ca2+ modulation combined with multi-assay approaches
Opposing effects of distinct Ca2+ signaling patterns on organelle motility
Based on prior evidence of Ca2+-dependent organelle transport regulation in neurons (Hirabayashi et al., 2017; MacAskill et al., 2009; Wang and Schwarz, 2009), we combined light-based Ca2+ manipulation with simultaneous live-cell imaging to examine the effects of distinct Ca2+ patterns on cell-wide organelle dynamics in astrocytes. To achieve this, astrocytes were co-expressed with Ca2+ probe, GCaMP6f, and organelle-specific markers, including Mito (mitochondria), Rab5 (early endosomes), LAMP1 (late endosomes/lysosomes), Rab11a (recycling endosomes), PEX3 (peroxisomes), and Glut4 (signaling vesicles). For both global and local analyses, Ca2+ signals and organelle trajectories were extracted from the same process segments defined on the organelle channel (organelle-based spatial masks) (Fig. 3 A).
We found that although the majority of mitochondria in astrocytes are stationary, the actively moving mitochondria temporarily arrested following global Ca2+ waves induced by a 10-s light exposure (Fig. 3 B and Video 6). Conversely, the 4-s illumination-induced local Ca2+ spikes generally increased mitochondrial motility (Fig. 3 I and Video 7). These results suggested that local versus global Ca2+ oscillations exert opposing effects on mitochondrial movement.
Similar patterns of arrested or accelerated motility were observed in various endosomal compartments, including early endosomes, recycling endosomes, signaling endosomes, and late endosomes/lysosomes, following global or local Ca2+ induction, respectively (Fig. 3, C–F and J–M; and Videos 8, 9, 10, and 11). Among the organelles tested, only peroxisomes exhibited no detectable response to changes in Ca2+ activity (Fig. 3, G, N, and O; and Videos 12 and 13), nor did we observe any directional preference in their movement. Additionally, we identified minor populations of the above Ca2+-responsive vesicles that displayed no detectable change in motility following elevated global Ca2+ levels, suggesting the existence of Ca2+-independent regulatory mechanism.
To determine whether an established physiological stimulus can reproduce these effects, we next activated endogenous mGluR-Gq-IP3R signaling with glutamate. In primary rat astrocytes, low concentration of glutamate (1 nM) predominantly increased local Ca2+ spikes and accelerated the movement of late endosome/lysosomes (Fig. S2, A and B). In contrast, higher glutamate (1 µM) induced strong and sustained cell-wide Ca2+ elevations and arrested late endosome/lysosomes transport (Fig. S2, C and D), resembling the outcome of the Local and Global illumination protocols, respectively. Thus, a receptor-mediated stimulus through the endogenous mGluR-Gq-IP3R signaling pathway can generate similar local and global Ca2+ activation patterns and converge on the same organelle transport outcomes as our illumination.
To further validate the role of Ca2+ in organelle motility, we treated astrocytes with the Ca2+ chelator BAPTA-AM (Zheng et al., 2022) or the Ca2+ channel inhibitor 2-APB (Doengi et al., 2009). Both treatments blocked the light-induced local Ca2+ spikes and reduced the motility of early endosomes (Fig. S3 A), as well as late endosomes/lysosomes (Fig. S3 B). Notably, a small subset of organelles exhibited Ca2+-independent motility, highlighting the diversity of regulator mechanisms governing organelle dynamics. Moreover, organelle motility recovered to baseline within minutes after Global illumination (Fig. S3, C and D), indicating that the Ca2+-induced arrest is rapid and reversible under our stimulation conditions. Together, these findings suggest a dual regulatory mechanism, where local Ca2+ spikes enhance organelle motility, while global Ca2+ waves attenuate movement.
Ca2+-induced arrest acts at the motor complex level
Previous studies have established that elevated cytosolic Ca2+ induces mitochondrial arrest through organelle-specific mechanisms that disrupt adaptor–motor interactions. One model proposes that mitochondrial luminal Ca2+ overload via mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter disrupts the interaction between kinesin and outer membrane adaptor Miro1 (Niescier et al., 2018), while another suggests cytosolic Ca2+ directly dissociates Miro1 from the motor complex to arrest motility without Ca2+ entering into mitochondria (Cai and Sheng, 2009; Liu and Hajnóczky, 2009). Although these mechanisms differ in Ca2+ compartmentalization (inside vs. outside mitochondria), both converge on mitochondria-centric disruption of Miro1–motor interactions to inhibit mitochondrial transport. However, such models fail to explain the system-wide organelle arrest triggered by global Ca2+ elevations observed above. To test whether Ca2+ can regulate transport upstream of organelle-specific adaptors, we integrated light-based Ca2+ manipulation with FKBP-FRB motor recruitment assays to directly assess the role of Ca2+ at the level of motor complexes.
We hypothesized that in addition to cargo adaptors, motor proteins themselves could be directly regulated by Ca2+ signaling. Kinesin-1 transports diverse organelles, including mitochondria (Vagnoni and Bullock, 2018), JIP-positive endosomes (Celestino et al., 2022), mRNA granules (Brendza et al., 2000), lysosomes (Du et al., 2016), and tubulin-containing oligomers (Nakata et al., 2011). Kinesin-1 is known to be coregulated with dynein/dynactin (Hancock, 2014). In the following experiments, we therefore focused on kinesin-1 and dynein/dynactin as representative anterograde and retrograde motor complexes. To bypass endogenous cargo adaptors, we fused the motor domains of kinesin-1 (KIF5C KHC domain) and dynein/dynactin (BicD2) to FKBP, enabling rapamycin-induced recruitment of motors to the surface of FRB-tagged organelles via FKBP-FRB dimerization (Fig. S4). To this end, we generated the following constructs: KIF5C1–559-mCherry-FKBP or mCherry-BicD21–594-FKBP for motors, and Myc-PEX31–42-FRB-HaloTag (peroxisome), Myc-FRB-HaloTag-MoA490–527 (mitochondria), Myc-LAMP1-FRB-HaloTag (late endosome/lysosome), or Myc-Glut4-FRB-HaloTag (signaling endosome) for organelles.
Co-expressed with GCaMP6f in astrocytes, these marker proteins allowed us to monitor and record organelle motility before and after rapamycin-induced motor recruitment, and during subsequent Ca2+ elevations (Fig. 4 A and Fig. 5 A). Rapamycin (100 nM) induced an immediate increase in motility for all tagged organelles, confirming successful motor recruitment to drive organelle movement (Fig. 4, B′–E′; and Fig. 5, B′–E′). In contrast, DMSO as vehicle did not alter organelle velocities over the same time window (Fig. 4, F′–I′; and Fig. 5, F′–I′). Quantitative analysis of mean organelle velocities in defined time windows before, during, and after treatment showed that rapamycin (Fig. 4, B‴–E‴; and Fig. 5, B‴–E‴), but not DMSO (Fig. 4, F‴–I‴; and Fig. 5, F‴–I‴), significantly increased organelle motility from the resting baseline. Thus, enforced motor recruitment is sufficient to accelerate multiple organelle transport in astrocytes.
We next asked whether global Ca2+ elevations affect this motor-driven transport. Following rapamycin-induced motor loading, global Ca2+ waves evoked by 10-s Global illumination consistently arrested most moving organelles, with slightly more pronounced effect in kinesin-recruited organelles (Fig. 5, B″–I″ and B‴–I‴) versus dynein/dynactin counterparts (Fig. 4, B″–I″ and B‴–I‴). Interestingly, although peroxisomes were generally insensitive to fluctuations in Ca2+ levels, motor-targeted peroxisomes also paused upon global Ca2+ elevation (Fig. 4, E‴ and I‴; and Fig. 5, E‴ and I‴). Taken together, these adaptor-bypassing experiments show that global Ca2+ waves acutely suppress motor-driven transport across multiple organelle types, suggesting that a major Ca2+-sensitive step resides at or near the motor complexes themselves, beyond the reported effects on adaptor proteins (Cai and Sheng, 2009; Li et al., 2016; Liu and Hajnóczky, 2009; MacAskill et al., 2009; Saotome et al., 2008; Wang and Schwarz, 2009).
To explore how elevated Ca2+ levels might inhibit motor activity, we investigated several Ca2+-responsive mechanisms known to influence organelle dynamics. First, we examined Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent regulation of motor domains, because Ca2+/calmodulin can bind near the motor domain of the plant kinesin KCBP and interfere with its ATP-ADP transition, thereby shutting down motility (Narasimhulu and Reddy, 1998; Vinogradova et al., 2009). In primary astrocytes, the calmodulin inhibitor W7 (Osawa et al., 1998) slightly increased baseline organelle velocity, but Global illumination–evoked Ca2+ waves still induced organelle arrest in the presence of W7 (Fig. S5, A–C). Second, we asked whether Ca2+ might indirectly inhibit motors by depleting cellular ATP, e.g., via Ca2+-dependent ATP release (Lezmy et al., 2021). However, fluorescent ATP sensors GRABATP1.0 (Wu et al., 2022) detected no significant changes in cellular ATP levels during global Ca2+ waves, while remaining responsive to exogenous ATP application (Fig. S5 E). Third, we considered whether Ca2+ might act via ER-anchored INF2 and actin remodeling, which has been reported to restrict mitochondrial and endosomal motility through ER-associated actin polymerization (Isogai et al., 2015; Schiavon et al., 2024, Preprint). Inhibiting INF2 with SMIFH2 modestly increased baseline organelle movement (Fig. S5 A), consistent with reduced actin-based constraint, yet global Ca2+ waves still robustly arrested organelle transport in the presence of SMIFH2 (Fig. S5 D). Together, these results indicate that Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent signaling, ATP depletion, and INF2-mediated actin remodeling are not the dominant drivers for Ca2+-induced organelle arrest in our system. Taken together with the adaptor-bypassing experiments, these data narrow the site of Ca2+-sensitive regulation to the level of the motor complexes, while leaving the precise molecular implementation to be defined in future work.
Local Ca2+ signaling facilitates organelle entry into distal processes and promotes their growth
The complex morphology of astrocytes, characterized by extensive and highly branched processes, underpins their diverse functions in the central nervous system. Neurons strategically distribute organelles within polarized axonal and dendritic projections to support neurodevelopment; e.g., late endosomes/lysosomes translocate to the neurite tips to facilitate their outgrowth (Raiborg et al., 2015). By analogy, we hypothesized that Ca2+ signaling governs organelle redistribution within astrocytic processes to enable structural expansion. To test this, we combined our light-based Ca2+ modulation system with process outgrowth assays.
Astrocytes treated with BAPTA-AM or 2-APB ablated local Ca2+ spikes, and caused perinuclear endosomal accumulation of early (indicated by Rab5) and late endosomes/lysosomes (indicated by LAMP1) compared with vehicle controls, as evidenced by increased perinuclear signal intensity (Fig. 6, A and B), suggesting local Ca2+ spikes are required for organelle dispersion.
To directly assess organelle trafficking to distal processes, we performed photobleaching experiments in live astrocytes. Selective bleaching of distal regions followed by organelle tracking demonstrated fewer endosomes’ entry into distal processes under BAPTA-AM treatment compared with vehicle controls (Fig. 6, C and D; and Videos 14, 15, 16, and 17). Local Ca2+ spikes triggered by pulsed illumination drive endosomes into distal regions (Video 18), confirming Ca2+-dependent regulation.
Functional assays linking light-based manipulation to astrocyte process growth demonstrated that increasing local Ca2+ spikes through 3 rounds of 4-s illumination (repeated at 30-min intervals) enhanced process elongation compared with the nonilluminated controls (Fig. 6, E–G). Together, these findings indicated that local Ca2+ spikes accelerate endosomal movement, facilitating their localization to distal processes necessary for continuous growth and extension of astrocyte branches. This highlights the critical role of Ca2+ signaling in regulating organelle dynamics and positioning essential for astrocyte function and morphology.
Discussion
In summary, we developed an optical strategy to generate endogenous-like Ca2+ signaling in astrocytes and demonstrated its seamless integration with chemical treatment (e.g., rapamycin-induced dimerization) and live imaging to dissect Ca2+-dependent regulation of organelle transport and process growth. Unlike prior approaches, which conflate distinct Ca2+ patterns, our system uncovered a striking divergence: local Ca2+ spikes accelerate organelle motility, while global Ca2+ waves arrest organelle movement. Under our stimulation protocols, these light-induced Ca2+ signals and motility changes are rapid and reversible and do not cause detectable structural damage, supporting them as a relatively gentle tool to monitor Ca2+-mediated organelle dynamics.
Global Ca2+ elevation in neurons has been reported to regulate mitochondrial arrest by adaptor proteins connecting motors to mitochondrial membranes (Chen and Sheng, 2013; MacAskill et al., 2009; van Spronsen et al., 2013). Although a similar mechanism may be present in astrocytes, our findings suggest that Ca2+ can also regulate organelle movement at the level of the motor machinery itself. Critically, we established that local Ca2+ drives organelle entry into distal processes to fuel their growth.
Combining this optical tool with adaptor-bypassing motor recruitment, our data suggest that a major Ca2+-sensitive step lies at or near the motor complexes. In our astrocyte system, global Ca2+ waves acutely suppress transport driven by kinesin-1 and dynein/dynactin that are artificially recruited to multiple organelles, and Ca2+/calmodulin inhibition, cellular ATP depletion, and INF2–actin remodeling do not prevent this Ca2+-induced arrest. Our working model, that Ca2+ can act directly on motor domains or their immediate regulatory regions, is supported by several lines of prior work in other systems. Structural and biochemical studies have revealed that Ca2+/calmodulin can bind near the motor domain of the plant kinesin KCBP to occlude the microtubule-binding surface and shut down motor activity (Vinogradova et al., 2004; Vinogradova et al., 2009). Furthermore, phosphorylation within or adjacent to the motor domain of kinesin-1 and the ciliary kinesin OSM-3 profoundly alters processivity and cargo transport (DeBerg et al., 2013; Huang et al., 2025; Kumari and Ray, 2022; Xu et al., 2012). Together, these studies support a molecular picture in which the motor domain and its neighboring regions serve as a core hub for Ca2+-dependent kinase signaling, making motor-proximal regulation a plausible mechanism. Together, these lines of evidence narrow the Ca2+-sensitive regulation to the level of motor complexes, while leaving the exact molecular study, such as specific Ca2+-sensitive residues or phosphorylation events on motors, to be defined in future work.
We further examined how these Ca2+ elevations are generated in astrocytes. The IP3R1/2/3 TKO data indicate that mercury light-induced Ca2+ signals in astrocytes require ER-resident IP3Rs and primarily draw on intracellular stores. Acute triple depletion of IP3R1/2/3 abolishes both local and global lamp-evoked Ca2+ elevations, and the same illumination protocols still evoke Ca2+ signals in astrocytes without extracellular calcium. This mechanism aligns with genetic knockout model studies demonstrating that both global Ca2+ waves and local Ca2+ spikes depend on IP3Rs. Specifically, IP3R2 has been reported to predominantly influence global Ca2+ waves, as evidenced by significant Ca2+ wave attenuation in IP3R2 KO mice (Sherwood et al., 2017; Srinivasan et al., 2015; Wang et al., 2021). IP3R3 primarily mediates local Ca2+ spikes while partially contributing to global Ca2+ waves, as reflected by IP3R2/3 double KO mice exhibiting weakened local spikes and exacerbated global wave defects (Sherwood et al., 2017). IP3R1 plays a minor role in astrocytic Ca2+ dynamics, likely due to its low expression level (Sherwood et al., 2021; Tamamushi et al., 2012). These studies provide a supporting mechanistic framework for our observed Ca2+ pattern dichotomy that brief illumination amplifies local spike frequency, and sustained illumination triggers expansive waves. Moreover, we observed that activating endogenous mGluR-Gq-IP3R signaling with glutamate recapitulates local and global Ca2+ activation patterns and the associated opposite effects on organelle transport in our system, supporting a view that the lamp-evoked Ca2+ dynamics engage into a physiologically relevant ER-IP3R signaling mode. Future integration of this optical tool with isoform-specific IP3R knockout mouse model may further dissect how individual IP3R subtypes shape distinct Ca2+ patterns and the spatial regulation of organelle dynamics.
Several high-resolution in vivo imaging studies have demonstrated that astrocytes in the intact brain can exhibit cell-wide Ca2+ activations during specific physiological and pathological conditions. In awake mice, cell-wide Ca2+ events are temporally correlated with spontaneous locomotion, and neuromodulator-driven global astrocytic Ca2+ elevations during arousal and locomotion have been linked to widespread changes in neuronal excitability and glutamatergic gliotransmission (Bindocci et al., 2017; Gau et al., 2024; Rasmussen et al., 2023; Wahis and Holt, 2021). Under pathological conditions, published works on epilepsy and cortical spreading depression show that large, highly synchronized astrocytic Ca2+ elevations and propagating glial Ca2+ waves accompany seizure-like hypersynchronous activity and spreading depolarization, and are associated with substantial changes in neuronal excitability and glutamatergic signaling (Carmignoto and Haydon, 2012; Peters et al., 2003). Together, these observations indicate that large-scale astrocyte Ca2+ events are indeed a mode of astrocyte activation that can happen under both physiological and pathological conditions.
In this context, the global Ca2+-induced arrest of organelle transport that we observed in cultured astrocytes could represent a transient brake that synchronizes intracellular transport. Analogous to activity-dependent mitochondrial arrest in neurons, where elevated Ca2+ halts mitochondrial transport to keep them near active sites (Chen and Sheng, 2013; MacAskill et al., 2009), a cell-wide Ca2+ surge in astrocytes could temporarily halt long-range cargo movement to limit ATP consumption on transport and prioritize local Ca2+ buffering and gliotransmission at sites of highest demand. This interpretation is a speculative, testable framework for future in vivo work using pattern-selective Ca2+ modulation to determine when, where, and how global arrest is engaged under physiological and pathological conditions.
Notably, the most active stage of Ca2+ oscillation in astrocytes corresponds to their early developmental phase (Watanabe et al., 2023), when astrocytes migrate, extend processes, and establish contacts with neurons, blood vessels, and other glial cells. This process is essential for brain physiology and pathology, relying on both extracellular cues and the intracellular distribution of organelles. In our system, local Ca2+ spikes promote distal accumulation of endosomes and enhance astrocyte process elongation, indicating that Ca2+-regulated organelle transport can directly contribute to the structural astrocytic expansion. Similar principles have been observed in neurons, where mitochondria and lysosomes are redistributed toward growing neurite tips to support neurite outgrowth via local energy supply and membrane remodeling (Iwata et al., 2023; MacAskill et al., 2010; Raiborg et al., 2015). Although the final delivery of cargoes to the plasma membrane in astrocytes is likely to involve actin-dependent motors and Ca2+-dependent exocytotic machinery as established in other cell types (Bhalla et al., 2006; Ramakrishnan et al., 2012), defining how these pathways couple to Ca2+-responsive organelle mobilization in astrocyte processes will serve as a rich topic for future work. For now, our work provides a versatile tool for studying how Ca2+-mediated organelle dynamics contribute to astrocyte process remodeling and signaling in well-controlled experimental settings.
Materials and methods
Study approval
All animal experimental procedures were conducted in strict accordance with Animal Care and Use Committee guidelines at Zhejiang University.
Preparation and purification of primary postnatal rat cortical astrocytes
Astrocyte culture procedures were exactly following the AWESAM protocol (Wolfes et al., 2017; Wolfes and Dean, 2018). Specifically, P0 Sprague Dawley rat pups (either sex) were decapitated and the brains were dissected into ice-cold neural dissection solution (10% horse serum (SH30074.02; HyClone) in DMEM (SH30243.01; HyClone)). The cortical tissue was dissected and cut into small pieces to facilitate enzyme digestion. The wet cortical tissue was then placed in a petri dish for chopping with sterile forceps. The chopped tissue was transferred to prewarmed 0.05% trypsin–EDTA (25300062; Gibco) and incubated at 37°C shaken every 5 min. After 15 min, trypsin was quenched using DMEM containing 10% FBS (SE100-011; VISTECH), 10 U/ml penicillin, and 10 U/ml streptomycin (15140-122; Gibco). The tissue was triturated and centrifuged at 1,200 rpm for 3 min at 4°C. The pellet was resuspended and further homogenized, allowed to settle, and stratify into single cells by standing still for 3 min, and this process was repeated three times. Mixed neural cells were seeded onto T75-cm2 cell culture flasks (430641; CORNING).
After 1 wk of culture, when the cell density reached over 95%, the flasks were shaken on an orbital shaker at 190 rpm for 6–8 h to remove residual microglia and oligodendrocytes. The detached cell monolayers were washed with 1× DPBS (D8537; Sigma-Aldrich), treated with trypsin for 3 min, and neutralized with DMEM (10% FBS, 10 U/ml penicillin, and 10 U/ml streptomycin). The cells were then washed twice to remove the trypsin and subsequently cultured in NB media, with 2% B27 (17504044; Gibco), 2 mM GlutaMAX (35050061; Gibco), 5 ng/ml HBEGF (0618325; PeproTech), 10 U/ml penicillin, and 10 U/ml streptomycin in Neurobasal medium (21103049; Gibco). Astrocytes were plated onto a 35-mm dish coated with 10 μg/ml poly-D-lysine (P0899; Sigma-Aldrich) and kept at 37°C, 5% CO2, in NB.
Preparation of IP3R1/2/3 conditional knockout mouse astrocytes
Primary astrocytes were prepared from Itpr1F/FItpr2F/FItpr3F/F conditional triple-knockout mice (Huang et al., 2024). Genotyping by PCR confirmed the triple-floxed mice in P1 pups. Primary astrocytes were isolated and cultured from the brains of these triple-floxed mice. Cells without any treatment served as the control group. The experimental group was treated with 5 μM TAT-Cre (D0512; Beyotime) for 2 h to induce the simultaneous knockout of Itpr1, Itpr2, and Itpr3 genes. The experiments were performed after 7 days of culture after induction.
The genotyping of Itpr1F/FItpr2F/FItpr3F/F C57BL/6 mice was performed following the method. Specifically, mouse tails were lysed in 100 μl 0.1 M EDTA (pH 8.0) (ST733; Beyotime) at 100°C for 2 h, then neutralized with 8 μl 1 M Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) (15568025; Invitrogen). After centrifugation at 12,000 rpm for 3 min, the supernatant was used for PCR. PCR products were resolved on a 12% gel at 110 V for 40 min and imaged with a Bio-Rad ChemiDoc UV system (Bio-Rad ChemiDoc). Wild-type Itpr1Itpr2Itpr3 yielded 879-bp, 816-bp, and 679-bp fragments, respectively, while the Itpr1F/FItpr2F/FItpr3F/F produced larger fragments.
Plasmids
The constructs KIF5C1–559-mCherry-FKBP and mCherry-BicD21–594-FKBP were generated by subcloning the coding open reading frame (cORF) from pBa-KIF5C1–559-tdTomato-FKBP (64211; Addgene) and pBa-Flag-BicD21–594-FKBP (64206; Addgene), respectively. Myc-SPGGSPGLQEF-FRB-TSYPYG-HaloTag was synthesized with Tsingke. pGP-CMV-GCaMP6f was purchased from Addgene (40755; Addgene).
Myc-FRB-HaloTag-MoA490–527 WPRE, which expresses MoA490–527 fused to the Halo fluorescent protein, was generated by subcloning the cORF of ECFP (W66A)-FRB-MoA (67904; Addgene) into the Myc-FRB-Halo backbone at HindIII sites. The cORF of LAMP1, Glut4, and PEX3 was amplified from 293T cDNA pool. LAMP1-mCherry, Glut4-mCherry, and PEX3-mCherry were subcloned into the Myc-FRB-HaloTag backbone at the 5′ BamHI and EcoRI sites. Mito-mCherry was generated by subcloning the cORF of mito-RFP (Chen et al., 2024) and inserted into the mCherry vector.
For all constructs, PCR amplification of the fragments and subsequent ligation were performed using One Step Cloning Kit (C117-01; Vazyme) and online design tools. All plasmids were verified by sequencing through Sangon Biotech or Tsingke (China). Plasmid isolation was carried out using an Endo-free DNA purification kit (D6943; Omega) following the manufacturer’s protocol. Purified plasmids were resuspended in ddH2O at a concentration of 3–5 μg/μl.
Reagents and antibodies
Chemical reagents were obtained from the following sources: rapamycin (HY-10219; MCE), 2-APB (HY-W009724; MCE), BAPTA-AM (HY-100545; MCE), W7 hydrochloride (HY-100912; MCE), SMIFH2 (HY-16931; MCE), EGTA (C17186299; MACKLIN), thapsigargin (HY-13433; MCE), glutamate (R20159; Yuanye OriLeaf), ATP (7699; Sigma-Aldrich), and Janelia Fluor 549 (GA1110; Promega) and 646 (GA1120; Promega) HaloTag ligands. Restriction endonucleases were from New England Biolabs, and other molecular cloning reagents were from Vazyme. The following antibodies were used: rabbit anti-IP3R1 (19962-1-AP; Proteintech), rabbit anti-IP3R2 (gift from Dr. Kunfu Ouyang, Peking University Shenzhen Hospital, Peking University) (Huang et al., 2024), rabbit anti-IP3R3 (20729-1-AP; Proteintech), mouse anti-GAPDH (GB12002-100; Servicebio). Secondary antibodies for immunoblotting were as follows: HRP-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG (AB0101; Abways) and HRP-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (AB0102; Abways). Enhanced Chemiluminescent Substrate Kit (36222ES60; Yeasen) was used for immunoblotting.
Primers for genotyping were as follows:
Itpr1 forward (F): 5′-AGACCTCTGCCTTAGGAGGTATTT-3′, reverse (R): 5′-TTTAAGAAAGCAAGGAGAAGGAGA-3′; Itpr2 F: 5′-GCTGTGCCCAAAATCCTAGCACTG-3′, R: 5′-AGTGATACAGGGCAAGTTCATAC-3′; Itpr3 F: 5′-CCTGCCTCCGTTTGTTACAT-3′, R: 5′-AGCTCCAGGTCTATAAAGCAAATG-3′.
DNA transfection
Astrocytes were replated onto a glass-bottomed 4-well chamber (C4-1.5H-N; Cellvis). All of the following amounts of plasmid used for transfection are for one well of the 4-well chamber. We used 0.5 μg of DNA mixed with 0.5 μl Lipofectamine 2000 (11668019; Invitrogen) diluted in 50 μl Opti-MEM (31985070; Gibco), and the media were replaced after 2 h. Cells were then incubated for 20–24 h before cell imaging.
Electroporation
Electroporation was performed using the Neon electroporation system (MPK1096K; Invitrogen) to transfect genes into astrocytes. All the following amounts of plasmid used for transfection are for one well of the 4-well chamber. We used 9–10 × 104 cells for each transfection. Cells were suspended in 1 ml of Ca2+/Mg2+-free 1× DPBS (D5773; Sigma-Aldrich) and centrifuged at 1,000 rpm for 2 min. The cell pellet was resuspended in 10 μl of buffer R (MPK1096K; Invitrogen) to make a cell mixture. The following plasmids FRB-Halo-organelle plasmid (0.6 μg), and GCaMP6f (0.5 μg) together with KIF5C1–559-mCherry-FKBP (0.5 μg) or mCherry-BicD21–594-FKBP (0.5 μg) were added to 10 μl of buffer R to make a DNA mixture. The above cells and DNA were mixed together, and subjected to electroporation immediately, with the following parameters: 1,300 V with 20-ms pulse width, for 2 pulses. Cells were then seeded into a poly-D-lysine–coated (P0899; Sigma-Aldrich, coated with 5 μg/ml for 30 min at room temperature) chamber containing 37°C prewarmed NB medium. After 2 h of incubation, the media were completely replaced with fresh NB medium to remove cell debris.
Immunoblotting
Astrocyte cells were washed with ice-cold PBS and lysed with lysis buffer (20118ES60; YEASEN), supplemented with protease inhibitor cocktail (C0101; LabLead). Cell lysates were then subjected to SDS-PAGE and blotted onto the PVDF membrane (IEVH85R; Millipore). Membranes loaded with proteins were blocked with 10% skimmed milk at room temperature for 1 h and incubated with primary antibodies at 4°C for overnight. After washing, membranes were incubated with secondary antibodies at room temperature for 1 h, washed thoroughly, incubated with chemiluminescent substrate solution, and imaged using e-BLOT Touch Imager. The gray values of each band were measured using ImageJ for quantitative analysis.
Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching
Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching experiments were conducted using an LSM 880 Airyscan (Zeiss) microscope for image acquisition.
All bleaching experiments used a 561-nm laser to bleach (80% laser power for 80 iterations) one subregion within the cell. Sequential images were captured at 500-ms intervals over the indicated time periods. Kymographs were generated using the Kymograph Builder tool of ImageJ (National Institutes of Health).
Live-cell imaging
Astrocyte cells were seeded on glass-bottomed 4-well chambers (C4-1.5H-N; Cellvis). Live-cell imaging was performed on an LSM 880 microscope (Zeiss) with a 63×/1.4 NA oil objective at standard confocal resolution or enhanced Airyscan resolution. The acquired images are processed with Airyscan, using the same processing strength value of 1 for all images. Live-cell imaging was carried out at 37°C and 5% CO2. Astrocytes were cultured in NB media, with 2% B27 (17504044; Gibco), 2 mM GlutaMAX (35050061; Gibco), 5 ng/ml HBEGF (0618325; PeproTech), 10 U/ml penicillin, and 10 U/ml streptomycin in Neurobasal medium (21103049; Gibco).
For calcium-free medium imaging, astrocytes transfected with the indicated plasmids were imaged at 22 h after transfection. Cells were first imaged in normal culture media for 250 s (501 frames), after which the media were then replaced with calcium-free medium (PWL037; MeilunBio) and cells were incubated at 37°C for 5 min before acquiring another 501 frames under the same imaging settings.
For drug-treatment imaging, cells were treated with EGTA (3 mM), thapsigargin (2 μM), 2-APB (100 μM), BAPTA-AM (100 μM), W7 hydrochloride (100 µM), and SMIFH2 (100 µM), for the time periods indicated in the figure legends, and the same cells were imaged immediately after treatment using the same acquisition settings. For rapamycin (100 nM) and glutamate (1 nM and 1 μM), drugs were added directly to the imaging media during continuous time-lapse acquisition, and organelle dynamics were recorded both immediately before and throughout drug application.
HaloTag labeling
To label astrocytes with HaloTag fusion constructs in the FKBP and FRB system, cells were incubated with 50–100 nM Janelia Fluor 646 (GA1120; Promega) HaloTag ligands for 30 min at 37°C and 5% CO2. After incubation, cells were rinsed three times to remove excess dye and incubated in complete NB medium for at least 30 min at 37°C and 5% CO2 prior to imaging.
Quantification of organelle distribution and motility
Quantification of organelle distribution was performed using the Reslice tool in ImageJ. Briefly, confocal images were opened, and the terminal regions of cellular protrusions were delineated using the ROI manager tool. Stacks-Reslice manipulations were then applied to measure the movement distance and trajectory of organelles over a defined time period along the ROI line.
Mean organelle velocity (μm/s) was quantified using the TrackMate plugin in ImageJ, with key parameters (Diameter, Max. Distance, Max. Gap) adjusted according to the observed particles and their motility.
Analysis of Ca2+ events in astrocytes
Ca2+ imaging data were analyzed using the AQuA toolbox, following instructions by Wang et al. (2019). Specifically, time-lapse image stacks (500 frames per movie) were first converted into 8-bit grayscale TIFF format using ImageJ and then imported into AQuA. We used the GluSnFR preset as a reference configuration to guide Ca2+ event detection, and applied it to our GCaMP6f datasets to automatically detect spatiotemporally coherent Ca2+ events and extract their basic features (amplitude and duration) without relying on manually drawn ROIs. Default GluSnFR preset parameters were used, with individual settings adjusted by no >5% to account for our imaging acquisition conditions (2 frames per second). Active voxels and super-voxels were fine-tuned to optimize event detection while avoiding fragmentation of single events.
For each detected event, AQuA provided an event region and associated dF/F time course. dF/F traces of GCaMP6f fluorescent signals were exported and analyzed using AQuA nEvt to obtain event amplitude (dF/F) and duration (s). Event frequency (events/min per cell) was calculated from AQuA-detected events originating within each astrocyte, using the 500-frame (4-min) recording window.
Light intensity measurement
Light intensity was quantified using a microscope slide power meter sensor (S175C; Thorlabs) connected to a PM100USB power meter (Thorlabs). Measurements were taken from the LSM 880 microscope (Zeiss) equipped with a 63×/1.40 NA oil-immersion objective. Following the manufacturer’s protocol, we separately calibrated the intensity for both fluorescence channels (EGFP and mCherry filter sets) to ensure precise illumination parameters during experiments.
Statistics and reproducibility
Data were analyzed with GraphPad Prism 10 to generate curves or bar graphs. Error bars represent the mean ± SEM. Statistical significance between groups was assessed using two-tailed Student’s t test. Multiple groups of samples were compared with one-way ANOVA and two-way ANOVA. Data normality was tested by the Shapiro–Wilk test, if not, the Kruskal–Wallis test was used. ns, not significant (P > 0.05), *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, and ****P < 0.0001.
Online supplemental material
Fig. S1 (related to Fig. 1) shows light-induced Ca2+ signal amplitude dynamics. Fig. S2 (related to Fig. 2) shows glutamate pathway stimulation enhances Ca2+ signaling and modulates lysosomal motility. Fig. S3 (related to Fig. 3) shows Ca2+ chelation suppresses organelle motility. Fig. S4 (related to Fig. 4 and Fig. 5) shows schematic of rapamycin-inducible motor recruitment. Fig. S5 (related to Fig. 6) shows exploration of Ca2+-sensitive pathways using inhibitors. Video 1 shows local Ca2+ spikes triggered by mercury lamp illumination. Video 2 shows global Ca2+ waves induced by high-intensity illumination. Video 3 shows 2-APB abolishes local Ca2+ spikes. Video 4 shows 2-APB suppresses global Ca2+ oscillations. Video 5 shows mercury lamp-induced Ca2+ signals depend on IP3R. Video 6 shows mitochondrial motility arrest during global Ca2+ waves. Video 7 shows mitochondrial dynamics during local Ca2+ spikes. Video 8 shows early endosome dynamics during local Ca2+ spikes. Video 9 shows recycling endosome dynamics during local Ca2+ spikes. Video 10 shows signaling endosome dynamics during local Ca2+ spikes. Video 11 shows late endosome/lysosome dynamics during local Ca2+ spikes. Video 12 shows peroxisome dynamics during local Ca2+ spikes. Video 13 shows peroxisome dynamics during local Ca2+ spikes. Video 14 shows late endosome/lysosome trafficking to distal processes under DMSO control. Video 15 shows BAPTA-AM inhibits late endosome/lysosome trafficking to distal processes. Video 16 shows early endosome trafficking to distal processes under DMSO control. Video 17 shows BAPTA-AM blocks early endosome trafficking to distal processes. Video 18 shows Ca2+-dependent late endosome/lysosome trafficking to distal processes. Table S1 includes primers of plasmids.
Data availability
Original data are available from the corresponding authors upon request.
Acknowledgments
We thank Professor Kunfu Ouyang from Peking University Shenzhen Hospital, Peking University, for providing both Itpr1F/FItpr2F/FItpr3F/F conditional triple-knockout mice and antibody against IP3R2. We thank Professor Yulong Li from Peking University for providing ATP sensors GRABATP1.0. We thank Professor Yang Niu in Hainan Medical University and Dr. Shuangshuang Liu from Imaging center in Zhejiang University for data analysis. We thank the technical support by the Core Facilities in both Zhejiang University-University of Edinburgh Institute and Hainan Medical University. We thank the technical supporting teams from both Zeiss and Thorlabs.
This study was supported by grants from the Natural Science Foundation of China (32070700 to Z. Hong, 3250040219 to S. Chen, and 32570868 and 92254307 to C. Yi), and by startup funding from the International Center for Aging and Cancer, Hainan Medical University (RP2500000375-ICAC to S. Chen). Open Access funding was provided by the University of Edinburgh.
Author contributions: Lan Yang: data curation, formal analysis, investigation, methodology, resources, software, validation, visualization, and writing—original draft, review, and editing. Mikael Björklund: writing—review and editing. Cong Yi: conceptualization, funding acquisition, investigation, resources, supervision, and writing—original draft, review, and editing. Shue Chen: conceptualization, data curation, formal analysis, funding acquisition, investigation, methodology, project administration, resources, supervision, validation, visualization, and writing—original draft, review, and editing. Zhi Hong: conceptualization, data curation, funding acquisition, investigation, methodology, project administration, resources, supervision, validation, visualization, and writing—original draft, review, and editing.
References
Author notes
Disclosures: The authors declare no competing interests exist.


