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1.
We investigated synaptic ultrastructure of individual nerve ending varicosities at the Drosophila larval neuromuscular junction in transgenic larvae overexpressing the learning gene dunce (dnc) in the nervous system. It was previously shown that cAMP is reduced to one-third normal in these larvae and that they have fewer nerve terminal varicosities and smaller junction potentials, although transmitter release from individual nerve ending varicosities is not significantly altered. We tested the hypothesis that synaptic ultrastructure is modified to compensate for possible reduced efficacy of synaptic transmission resulting from lower than normal cAMP. Synaptic size and number of presynaptic dense bodies (active zone structures) per synapse are modestly enhanced in transgenic larvae overexpressing the dnc gene product and in rutabaga (rut(1)) mutant larvae, which have reduced adenylyl cyclase activity and reduced neural cAMP. The incidence of complex synapses (possessing 2 or more presynaptic dense bodies) was not consistently different in experimental larvae compared to controls. The observations suggest that chronic reduction of cAMP levels in the nervous system of Drosophila larvae, although leading to a modest compensatory change in synaptic structure, does not markedly alter several synaptic ultrastructural parameters which are thought to influence the strength of transmitter release; thus, homeostatic mechanisms do not act to maintain normal-sized junction potentials by altering synaptic structure.  相似文献   

2.
Synaptic transmission is highly plastic and subject to regulation by a wide variety of neuromodulators and neuropeptides. In the present study, we have examined the role of isoforms of the cytochrome b561 homologue called no extended memory (nemy) in regulation of synaptic strength and plasticity at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) of third instar larvae in Drosophila. Specifically, we generated two independent excisions of nemy that differentially affect the expression of nemy isoforms. We show that the nemy 45 excision, which specifically reduces the expression of the longest splice form of nemy, leads to an increase in stimulus evoked transmitter release and altered synaptic plasticity at the NMJ. Conversely, the nemy 26.2 excision, which appears to reduce the expression of all splice forms except the longest splice isoform, shows a reduction in stimulus evoked transmitter release, and enhanced synaptic plasticity. We further show that nemy 45 mutants have reduced levels of amidated peptides similar to that observed in peptidyl-glycine hydryoxylating mono-oxygenase (PHM) mutants. In contrast, nemy 26.2 mutants show no defects in peptide amidation but rather display a decrease in Tyramine β hydroxylase activity (TβH). Taken together, these results show non-redundant roles for the different nemy isoforms and shed light on the complex regulation of neuromodulators.  相似文献   

3.
N‐ethylmaleimide sensitive fusion protein (NSF) is an ATPase necessary for vesicle trafficking, including exocytosis. Current models hold that NSF is required in a step that readies vesicles for fusion by disassembling postfusion SNARE protein complexes allowing them to participate in further rounds of vesicle cycling. Whereas most organisms have only one NSF isoform, Drosophila has two. dNSF1 is the predominant functional isoform in the adult nervous system. Conditional mutations in the dNSF1 gene, comatose, are paralytic and lead to disruption of synaptic transmission and the rapid accumulation of SNARE complexes in adult flies. This isoform is not required for synaptic transmission in larvae. In contrast, dNSF2 is important at earlier developmental stages, and its broad expression indicates its importance in neural and non‐neural tissues alike. To study dNSF2, and to circumvent the lethality of dNSF2 null mutants, we have constructed transgenic flies carrying a dominant negative form of dNSF2. When this construct was expressed in neurons we observed suppression of synaptic transmission, activity‐dependent fatigue of transmitter release, and a reduction in the number of releasable vesicles. However, we unexpectedly found that there was no accumulation of SNARE complexes accompanying these physiological phenotypes. Intriguingly, we also found that expression of mutant dNSF2 induced pronounced overgrowth of the neuromuscular junction and some misrouting of axons. These results support the idea that dNSF2 has multiple roles in cellular function and adds that not all of its functions require disassembly of the SNARE complex. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol 51: 261–271, 2002  相似文献   

4.
Potassium channels control the repolarization of nerve terminals and thus play important roles in the control of synaptic transmission. Here we describe the effects of mutations in theslowpoke gene, which is the structural gene for a calcium activated potassium channel, on transmitter release at the neuromuscular junction inDrosophila melanogaster. Surprisingly, we find that theslowpoke mutant exhibits reduced transmitter release compared to normal. Similarly, theslowpoke mutation significantly suppresses the increased transmitter release conferred either by a mutation inShaker or by application of 4-aminopyridine, which blocks theShaker-encoded potassium channel at theDrosophila nerve terminal. Furthermore, theslowpoke mutation suppresses the striking increase in transmitter release that occurs following application of 4-aminopyridine to theether a go-go mutant. This suppression is most likely the result of a reduction of Ca2+ influx into the nerve terminal in theslowpoke mutant. We hypothesize that the effects of theslowpoke mutation are indirect, perhaps resulting from increased Ca2+ channel inactivation, decreased Na+ or Ca2+ channel localization or gene expression, or by increases in the expression or activity of potassium channels distinct fromslowpoke.  相似文献   

5.
Ca2+ influx through voltage‐activated Ca2+ channels and its feedback regulation by Ca2+‐activated K+ (BK) channels is critical in Ca2+‐dependent cellular processes, including synaptic transmission, growth and homeostasis. Here we report differential roles of cacophony (CaV2) and Dmca1D (CaV1) Ca2+ channels in synaptic transmission and in synaptic homeostatic regulations induced by slowpoke (slo) BK channel mutations. At Drosophila larval neuromuscular junctions (NMJs), a well‐established homeostatic mechanism of transmitter release enhancement is triggered by experimentally suppressing postsynaptic receptor response. In contrast, a distinct homeostatic adjustment is induced by slo mutations. To compensate for the loss of BK channel control presynaptic Sh K+ current is upregulated to suppress transmitter release, coupled with a reduction in quantal size. We demonstrate contrasting effects of cac and Dmca1D channels in decreasing transmitter release and muscle excitability, respectively, consistent with their predominant pre‐ vs. postsynaptic localization. Antibody staining indicated reduced postsynaptic GluRII receptor subunit density and altered ratio of GluRII A and B subunits in slo NMJs, leading to quantal size reduction. Such slo‐triggered modifications were suppressed in cac;;slo larvae, correlated with a quantal size reversion to normal in double mutants, indicating a role of cac Ca2+ channels in slo‐triggered homeostatic processes. In Dmca1D;slo double mutants, the quantal size and quantal content were not drastically different from those of slo, although Dmca1D suppressed the slo‐induced satellite bouton overgrowth. Taken together, cac and Dmca1D Ca2+ channels differentially contribute to functional and structural aspects of slo‐induced synaptic modifications. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol 74: 1–15, 2014  相似文献   

6.
Synaptic delay of single-quantum response with low mean quantal size (0.05–1) was measured during experiments on preparations of frog neuromuscular junctions using extracellular focal recording of presynaptic action potentials and endplate currents. It was found that distribution of these synaptic delays is of a polymodal nature and mean intermodal interval equaled 0.22±0.01 msec over 13 experiments. An increase in quantal size produced only a redistribution of mode weighting, while mean modal interval remained unchanged. A reduction in temperature induced an increase in the modal interval with the temperature coefficient Q10=2.42±0.14 (n=15). The explanation is suggested that the process of quantal transmitter release is determined by interaction between the calcium-dependent mechanism for raising the likelihood of release on the one hand and the rhythmic operation of the system producing transmitter release on the other. The latter stage in the process depends on temperature, not intracellular Ca2+ concentration. The polymodal distribution of synaptic delay reflects the rhythmic operation of the transmitter release zone.I. M. Sechenov Institute of Evolutionary Physiology and Biochemistry, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 18, No. 6, pp. 748–756, November–December, 1986.  相似文献   

7.
We examined the role of phosphatases in synaptic transmission using the permeant phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid (OA). In the crayfish neuromuscular junction (NMJ), postsynaptic effects including increases in input resistance occurred at doses greater than 5 μM OA. At lower doses (0.5–5 μM) the effects were solely presynaptic and transmitter release increased over three-fold despite small reductions in amplitude and duration of presynaptic action potentials. Potentiating effects of serotonin on transmitter release, Which depend on phosphorylation, were increased by OA. Frequency facilitation was reduced but its decay was not affected. In frog NMJs, OA increased spontaneous and evoked release two-fold through presynaptic mechanisms. An inactive analog of OA, OA tetra-acetate, had no effect on transmitter release at frog and crayfish NMJ. Therefore, phosphatases have a strong modulating influence on synaptic transmission.  相似文献   

8.
IT is known from earlier studies of regeneration of neuromuscular synapses in the frog1 that the nerve fibres return to the region of the original end-plate and that there is a time after the ending has re-established synaptic contact during which a nerve impulse fails to evoke transmitter release, even though spontaneous release occurs. Even after neuromuscular transmission is restored, the response latency is longer than usual and the nerve is more liable to presynaptic failure of propagation1. This study is part of an attempt to examine in more detail the characteristics of transmitter release during this period.  相似文献   

9.
Synaptic dysfunction is considered the primary substrate for the functional declines observed within the nervous system during age-related neurodegenerative disease. Dietary restriction (DR), which extends lifespan in numerous species, has been shown to have beneficial effects on many neurodegenerative disease models. Existing data sets suggest that the effects of DR during disease include the amelioration of synaptic dysfunction but evidence of the beneficial effects of diet on the synapse is lacking. Dynactin mutant flies have significant increases in mortality rates and exhibit progressive loss of motor function. Using a novel fly motor disease model, we demonstrate that mutant flies raised on a low calorie diet have enhanced motor function and improved survival compared to flies on a high calorie diet. Neurodegeneration in this model is characterized by an early impairment of neurotransmission that precedes the deterioration of neuromuscular junction (NMJ) morphology. In mutant flies, low calorie diet increases neurotransmission, but has little effect on morphology, supporting the hypothesis that enhanced neurotransmission contributes to the effects of diet on motor function. Importantly, the effects of diet on the synapse are not because of the reduction of mutant pathologies, but by the increased release of synaptic vesicles during activity. The generality of this effect is demonstrated by the observation that diet can also increase synaptic vesicle release at wild-type NMJs. These studies reveal a novel presynaptic mechanism of diet that may contribute to the improved vigor observed in mutant flies raised on low calorie diet.  相似文献   

10.
K+ currents in cultured Drosophila larval neurons have been classified into four categories according to their inactivation time constants, relative amplitude, and response to K+ channel blockers 4‐AP and triethylammonium. The percentage (65%) of neurons displaying K+ currents which were reduced to 30% in amplitude by 5 mM cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) analog 8‐bromo‐cAMP in both Drosophila memory mutants rutabaga (rut) and amnesiac (amn) was significantly larger than that (50%) in wild type. This initial characterization provides evidence for altered K+ currents in both rut and amn mutants. Arachidonic acid, a specifical inhibitor of Kv4 family (shal) K+ channels, was found to inhibit K+ currents in cultured Drosophila neurons, suggesting the presence of shal channels in these neurons. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 40: 158–170, 1999  相似文献   

11.
N-ethylmaleimide sensitive fusion protein (NSF) is an ATPase necessary for vesicle trafficking, including exocytosis. Current models hold that NSF is required in a step that readies vesicles for fusion by disassembling postfusion SNARE protein complexes allowing them to participate in further rounds of vesicle cycling. Whereas most organisms have only one NSF isoform, Drosophila has two. dNSF1 is the predominant functional isoform in the adult nervous system. Conditional mutations in the dNSF1 gene, comatose, are paralytic and lead to disruption of synaptic transmission and the rapid accumulation of SNARE complexes in adult flies. This isoform is not required for synaptic transmission in larvae. In contrast, dNSF2 is important at earlier developmental stages, and its broad expression indicates its importance in neural and non-neural tissues alike. To study dNSF2, and to circumvent the lethality of dNSF2 null mutants, we have constructed transgenic flies carrying a dominant negative form of dNSF2. When this construct was expressed in neurons we observed suppression of synaptic transmission, activity-dependent fatigue of transmitter release, and a reduction in the number of releasable vesicles. However, we unexpectedly found that there was no accumulation of SNARE complexes accompanying these physiological phenotypes. Intriguingly, we also found that expression of mutant dNSF2 induced pronounced overgrowth of the neuromuscular junction and some misrouting of axons. These results support the idea that dNSF2 has multiple roles in cellular function and adds that not all of its functions require disassembly of the SNARE complex.  相似文献   

12.
Formation of terminal synapses at sites such as the neuromuscular junction involves transformation of the motile growth cone into the nonmotile synaptic terminal. However, transformation does not need to be the mechanism when a neurite forms multiple widely spaced synaptic varicosities along a target in an en passant configuration. Synaptic varicosities could form here by specialization of the neurite after the growth cone has advanced past the site. We examined this issue by using cocultures of identified sensory (SN) and motor (L7) neurons from Aplysia. Living SNs were labeled with fluorescent dye and their neurites were observed at high resolution every few minutes growing along the axon of L7, allowing a fine-grained analysis of the behavior of the growth cone at the sites of synapse formation. All varicosities whose formation was observed indeed developed from the growth cone. Sensory varicosities were shown by electron microscopy to contain features characteristic of active zones for transmitter release within a day of their formation on the motor axon. Growth cone advance slowed or stopped transiently during varicosity formation, but the motile activity of the peripheral region of the growth cone (veils and filopodia) was maintained. These results suggest that target "stop signals" involved in the formation of synapses, at least of the en passant variety, may be of a different type from the growth inhibitory molecules, such as the collapsins, which guide axons to their targets.  相似文献   

13.
cAMP analogs and activation of adenylyl cyclase by forskolin strongly potentiate synaptic transmission at the Drosophila neuromuscular junction. These effects are generally attributed to activation of cAMP‐dependent protein kinase. Recent reports on crustacean and mammalian synapses have implicated other cAMP‐dependent effectors in synaptic potentiation. Drosophila neuromuscular junctions were tested for effects of two known cAMP‐dependent effectors: hyperpolarization‐activated, cyclic nucleotide‐regulated channels (HCNCs) and guanine nucleotide exchange protein activated by cAMP (Epac). Forskolin‐induced enhancement of synaptic transmission was drastically reduced by a blocker of HCNCs, but not completely eliminated. A specific agonist for Epac modestly enhanced synaptic potentials. This agonist also stabilized their amplitudes in the presence of a blocker of HCNCs. The observations implicate HCNCs and Epac in cAMP‐dependent potentiation that does not require cAMP‐dependent protein kinase, indicating that additional previously unexplored factors contribute to synaptic plasticity in Drosophila. Genetic and molecular techniques available for Drosophila can be used to define the underlying molecular basis for cAMP‐dependent synaptic potentiation. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol, 2006  相似文献   

14.
Summary TheDrosophila X-linked mutantrutabaga (Duerr and Quinn 1982) fails to perform normally in olfactory conditioning paradigms, in spite of being able to sense odorants and shock (Figs. 1–3).rut is capable of forming an association between shock and odorant, but memory decays rapidly; the memory of the mutant following intensive training resembles that of normal flies following very brief training (Fig. 4).rut flies also display in vitro a defective adenylate cyclase activity (Fig. 6). The enzyme in the mutant is responsive to stimulation by a putative neurotransmitter and by a guanyl nucleotide (Fig. 8) but the activity is lower than normal even in the presence of forskolin (Fig. 8) and MnATP (Fig. 9), suggesting that the lesion is closely associated with the function of the catalytic subunit.rut/ + heterozygotes are semi-recessive with regard to both the behavioral defect and the biochemical defect (Figs. 5, 7). The behavioral and the biochemical lesions detected inrut flies are discussed in light of current molecular models of learning.  相似文献   

15.
In experiments on neuromuscular junctions in the frog m. cutaneous-pectoris, changes in the intensity and asynchronicity of transmitter release during high-frequency (10 and 50 sec-1) rhythmic stimulation of the motor nerve were investigated using extracellular recording. At low extracellular Ca2+ concentrations, rhythmic stimulation resulted in a gradual enlargement of the quantum content of end-plate currents (EPC), the so-called facilitation. The latter phenomenon was accompanied by an increase in the average value and variance of synaptic delays of single-quantum EPC, a shift of the main mode of their distribution towards greater values, and an increase in the latency of the nerve ending responses. The above-described changes reduce the magnitude of facilitation in the neuromuscular synapse.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Synaptic terminals of fast (FCE) and slow (SCE) excitatory neurons were physiologically identified on separate fibres of one muscle, the closer muscle in lobster claws. The innervation by these identified fibers was demonstrated over long distances (7–21 m) by examining serial thin sections at periodic intervals. The ultrastructure of each type of innervation was consistent both qualitatively and quantitatively in two separate samples. The FCE innervation is relatively simple in having consistently small-diameter terminals each forming a single long synapse, with few synaptic vesicles, and little if any postsynaptic apparatus. The SCE innervation is more complex in having larger-diameter but more variable terminals forming several short synapses, with many synaptic vesicles and an extensive postsynaptic apparatus. These differences in the size of the synapses and the number of synaptic vesicles parallel differences in transmitter release and fatigue sensitivity characteristic of the two types of innervation. The degree of elaboration of the postsynaptic apparatus may reflect differences in the amount of transmitter taken up after release. Our data reveal for the first time in a single muscle differences between FCE and SCE innervation previously reported in different muscles and in different species.Supported by grants from NIH (NINCDS) to A.G. Humes and the late Fred Lang and from NSERC and Muscular Dystrophy Assoc. of Canada to C.K. GovindWe thank Lena Hill for her technical expertise and critical evaluation of the study, and Dr. A.G. Humes for providing research facilities  相似文献   

17.
Crustacean muscles are innervated by phasic and tonic motor neurons that display differential physiology and have morphologically distinct synaptic terminals. Phasic motor neurons release much more transmitter per impulse and have filiform terminals, whereas tonic motor neurons release less transmitter and have larger terminals with prominent varicosities. Using an antibody raised against Drosophila frequenin (frq), a calcium‐binding protein that enhances transmitter release in Drosophila synaptic terminals, we found that frq‐like immunoreactivity is prominent in many of the phasic, but not tonic nerve endings of crayfish motor neurons. In contrast, synapsin‐ and dynamin‐like immunoreactivities are strongly expressed in both types of terminal. The immunocytochemical findings strongly suggested the presence of an frq‐like molecule in crayfish, and its differential expression indicated a possible modulatory role in transmitter release. Therefore, we cloned the cDNA sequences for the crayfish and lobster homologues of Drosophila frq. Crustacean frequenins are very similar in sequence to their Drosophila counterpart, and calcium‐binding regions (EF hands) are conserved. The widespread occurrence of frq‐like molecules and their differential localization in crayfish motor neurons indicate a significant role in physiology or development of these neurons. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 41: 165–175, 1999  相似文献   

18.
The relationship was studied between radiation-induced apoptosis in the nervous system of Drosophila larvae and the age dynamics in adult fly neuromuscular activity. The level of apoptosis in the neural ganglia of third-instar larvae from the wild-type strain increased 2.5 times after larval exposure to ionizing radiation (54 cGy). Irradiation of the strain with enhanced sensitivity to apoptosis induction, which carries a mutation in gene–inhibitor of apoptosis th (allele th 4), and the wild-type strain Berlin led to an increase in neuromuscular activity of adult flies throughout the experiment and, consequently, to reduced aging rate. Conversely, this effect was not observed in strains with reduced sensitivity to induction of apoptosis (with mutations in genes dArk and Dcp-1).  相似文献   

19.
New Step in Transmitter Release at the Myoneural Junction   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
QUANTAL release of acetylcholine from vesicles in the presynaptic terminals of neuromuscular synapses is well established1–3, even if some doubts persist4. The mechanism by which acetylcholine (or any other transmitter at other synapses) is transferred from the vesicles into the synaptic gap, however, is unknown. A calcium influx into the terminal is associated with release of transmitter5, as is an electrical field change6.  相似文献   

20.
Ribosomal S6 kinases (RSKs) are growth factor‐regulated serine‐threonine kinases participating in the RAS‐ERK signaling pathway. RSKs have been implicated in memory formation in mammals and flies. To characterize the function of RSK at the synapse level, we investigated the effect of mutations in the rsk gene on the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) in Drosophila larvae. Immunostaining revealed transgenic expressed RSK in presynaptic regions. In mutants with a full deletion or an N‐terminal partial deletion of rsk, an increased bouton number was found. Restoring the wild‐type rsk function in the null mutant with a genomic rescue construct reverted the synaptic phenotype, and overexpression of the rsk‐cDNA in motoneurons reduced bouton numbers. Based on previous observations that RSK interacts with the Drosophila ERK homologue Rolled, genetic epistasis experiments were performed with loss‐ and gain‐of‐function mutations in Rolled. These experiments provided evidence that RSK mediates its negative effect on bouton formation at the Drosophila NMJ by inhibition of ERK signaling. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol 2009  相似文献   

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