 |
Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, November 1, 1999, 19(21):9374-9384
Targeted Expression of Truncated Glued Disrupts Giant
Fiber Synapse Formation in Drosophila
Marcus J.
Allen1,
Xiaoliang
Shan1,
Phyllis
Caruccio1,
Stephan J.
Froggett1,
Kevin G.
Moffat2, and
R. K.
Murphey1
1 Department of Biology, Morrill Science Center,
University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003, and
2 Department of Biological Sciences, University of Warwick,
Coventry CV4 7AL, United Kingdom
 |
ABSTRACT |
Glued1
(Gl1) mutants produce a truncated
protein that acts as a poison subunit and disables the cytoplasmic
retrograde motor dynein. Heterozygous mutants have axonal defects in
the adult eye and the nervous system. Here we show that selective
expression of the poison subunit in neurons of the giant fiber (GF)
system disrupts synaptogenesis between the GF and one of its targets, the tergotrochanteral motorneuron (TTMn). Growth and pathfinding by the
GF axon and the TTMn dendrite are normal, but the terminal of the GF
axon fails to develop normally and becomes swollen with large vesicles.
This is a presynaptic defect because expression of truncated
Glued restricted to the GF results in the same defect. When tested electrophysiologically, the flies with abnormal axons show
a weakened or absent GF-TTMn connection. In
Glued1 heterozygotes, GF-TTMn
synapse formation appears morphologically normal, but adult flies show
abnormal responses to repetitive stimuli. This physiological effect is
also observed when tetanus toxin is expressed in the GFs. Because the
GF-TTMn is thought to be a mixed electrochemical synapse, the results
show that Glued has a role in assembling both the chemical and
electrical components. We speculate that disrupting transport of a
retrograde signal disrupts synapse formation and maturation.
Key words:
retrograde motors; transport; p150GLUED; giant fibers; UAS-GAL4; dynein-dynactin
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Neurons are long, polarized cells
that rely extensively on the cytoskeleton for relaying information and
subcellular constituents to and from the soma and distal processes.
Anterograde-directed transport along the microtubules is conducted by
the kinesin family of motors and retrograde-directed transport is
conducted primarily by cytoplasmic dynein (for review, see Hirokawa,
1998 ). In Drosophila, kinesin mutations alter anterograde
transport and cause organelle jams in larval axons that disrupt
synaptic function and cause behavioral and physiological abnormalities
(Gho et al., 1992 ; Hurd and Saxton, 1996 ; Hurd et al., 1996 ; Gindhart
et al., 1998 ). Similarly, mutations that affect dynein-dynactin
function disrupt retrograde transport and cause axonal defects and
synaptic dysfunction (Phillis et al., 1996 ; Reddy et al., 1997 ; Murphey
et al., 1999 ).
One hypothesis for the dynein-dynactin defects is that the retrograde
motor plays an important role in the formation or stability of certain
synapses (Riccio et al., 1997 ; Murphey et al., 1999 ). The
Glued locus encodes a 150 kDa protein that is part of
dynactin, a protein complex that activates cytoplasmic dynein
(Waterman-Storer and Holzbaur, 1996 ; Holleran et al., 1998 ) and links
the motor to its cargo (Karki and Holzbaur, 1995 ; Vaughan and
Vallee, 1995 ; Waterman-Storer et al., 1997 ). The dominant
Glued1
(Gl1) mutation in
Drosophila results in a truncated protein product (Swaroop
et al., 1985 ), which competes with wild-type protein, forming complexes
that can bind to dynein but are unable to bind to the cargo, and this
disrupts retrograde transport (McGrail et al., 1995 ; for review, see
Allan, 1996 ).
To examine the role of retrograde motors in synaptogenesis, we have
examined the giant fiber (GF) system of Drosophila, a simple
circuit with a single large central synapse amenable to electrophysiological studies (for review, see Thomas and Wyman 1983 ).
The GFs relay excitation from the brain to the thoracic ganglia where
they make two identified synapses: one to the large tergotrochanteral
motorneuron (TTMn) that drives the leg extensor muscle (TTM) and a
second with the peripherally synapsing interneuron (PSI), which then
synapses with the dorsal longitudinal flight motoneurons (DLMns) (King
and Wyman, 1980 ).
Here we show, by selectively expressing a truncated Glued poison
subunit in the neurons of the giant fiber system (Brand and Perrimon,
1993 ; Phelan et al., 1996 ; Allen et al., 1998 ), that the retrograde
motor is needed to generate a normal GF-TTMn synapse and that the
effects are specific to the GF. Morphologically, the GF in transgenic
animals fails to assemble the normal presynaptic terminal. Testing of
the GF-TTMn synapse electrophysiologically reveals weakened or absent
connections that often show no dye coupling. The physiological
phenotypes observed in mutant and transgenic flies are mimicked when
chemical transmission is blocked by targeted expression of the tetanus
toxin light chain in the GF. This supports recent evidence that the
synapse is a mixed electrochemical junction. Our data show that both
the electrical and chemical components are compromised by disruption of
the retrograde motor. These results support a model in which a
retrograde signal received by the GF enables synapse maturation to proceed.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Drosophila stocks. All stocks were grown at
25°C or room temperature on standard medium. Two P[GAL]4 lines that
expressed in the giant fiber system were used: P[GAL4] A307 (Phelan
et al., 1996 ; Allen et al., 1998 ), hereafter referred to as A307, an
enhancer line that shows expression in the GF, the TTMn, the PSI, and
possibly other neurons in the giant fiber system (e.g., the DLMns). The other line, P[GAL4] c17, hereafter referred to as c17, shows
expression in the GF and a subset of sensory neurons (Trimarchi et al.,
1999 ) but in no other identified neurons of the giant fiber system. For
developmental analysis, the In(2LR)GlaBc chromosome was used so that pupae that contained only A307 could be distinguished from
those carrying A307 and
P[UAS-Gl 96B].
Generation of the P[UAS-Gl ] lines.
The 2897 bp truncated cDNA, encoding only the N-terminal 922 amino
acids of Glued (Fan and Ready, 1997 ), was removed from pCaSpeR-hs (DNA
kindly provided by Dr. Don Ready, Purdue University) as an
EcoRI fragment and cloned into the pUAST vector (Brand and
Perrimon, 1993 ). Transgenic lines containing this construct were
generated by germline transformation of w
1118 embryos essentially as described by
Spradling and Rubin (1983) . Twelve independent transformant
lines were generated, of which two, both second chromosome viable
insertions
(UAS-Gl 84
and
UAS-Gl 96B),
were used in this study.
Immunocytochemistry. CNS of adults and pupae were dissected
in 100 mM phosphate buffer (PB) and immediately fixed in
4% paraformaldehyde in PB for at least 30 min at room temperature.
Preparations were washed twice in PB + 0.4% Triton X-100 (PBT),
treated with 2N HCl in PBT for 30 min, and further washed four times to
remove the acid. After it was blocked for 2 hr in 100 mM
PB, 1% bovine serum albumin, 0.1% Triton X-100 (PAT), the tissue was
incubated overnight with a rabbit polyclonal anti- -galactosidase
antibody (Cappel, Tunhout, Belgium) at a dilution of 1:10,000 in PAT + 3% normal goat serum. Preparations were then washed at least three times (1 hr each time) in PAT before they were incubated with a
biotinylated goat anti-rabbit secondary antibody (Vector Labs, Burlingame, CA), 1:250 in PAT. Further processing was performed according to ABC kit instructions (Vector Labs), and the specimens were
dehydrated through a series of ethanol dilutions, cleared using methyl
salicylate, and mounted in Canada Balsam. Selected whole-mount
preparations were embedded in plastic as described by Murphey et al.
(1999) and sectioned in the horizontal plane at 7 µm thickness.
Physiology. Adult flies were prepared in a method similar to
that described by Tanouye and Wyman (1980) and Gorczyca and Hall (1984) . Flies were lightly anesthetized with ether and waxed, ventral
side down, onto a small podium in a Petri dish. The wings were waxed
down in an outward position to expose the dorsal and lateral surfaces
of the thorax. The GFs were activated extracellularly by two etched
tungsten electrodes, one placed through each eye into the
supra-esophageal ganglion. Threshold for the short-latency direct
excitation for GF stimulation was usually a pulse of ~10-20 V for
0.03 msec from a Grass S44 stimulator (Grass Instruments, Quincy, MA)
(Tanouye and Wyman, 1980 ; Engel and Wu, 1996 ). We therefore routinely
gave pulses two to three times threshold to ensure that threshold was
always exceeded. For direct extracellular stimulation of the
motoneurons the tungsten electrodes were placed in the thoracic
ganglion. A tungsten electrode placed in the abdominal cavity served as
a ground.
Intracellular recordings from muscles were obtained with saline-filled
glass micropipettes (resistance 40-60 M ) driven through the cuticle
into the muscle fibers. Intracellular recordings were amplified using a
Getting 5A amplifier (Getting Instruments, Iowa City, IA) and
recordings observed and photographed directly from a storage
oscilloscope (Tektronics, Wilsonville, OR).
Our method of activating the GFs by brain stimulation raises the
concern that other neurons, involved in descending pathways that lead
to the muscles, are also being activated. However, some experimental
preparations gave no response in either TTM or DLM on brain stimulation
(see Results), indicating that there are no alternative pathways that
can be activated with our method of brain stimulation. Stimulation of
the thorax in these unresponsive preparations led to short-latency
muscle responses and demonstrated that the motoneurons and
neuromuscular junctions were intact.
Each animal was subjected to three standard tests: response latency,
refractory period, and following frequency. For latencies each fly was
given five single pulses that were overlaid on the storage
oscilloscope. Measurements were taken from the beginning of the
stimulation artifact to the beginning of the EPSP. In cases where the
five pulses did not give identical response latencies, the shortest
latency was always measured. To determine the refractory period, twin
pulses were used at 10, 8, 6, 4, 3, and 2 msec apart. The refractory
period was recorded as the shortest of these intervals at which a
second response was always seen and therefore always an integer. For
following frequency, stimuli were given at 250 Hz, a frequency at which
the TTM will follow perfectly and the DLM will start to fail (Tanouye
and Wyman, 1980 ). The number of responses to 10 stimuli was counted and
expressed as a percentage. In some experiments for measurements of
following at different frequencies, each animal was given 10 pulses
from a Grass S48 stimulator at each of the three frequencies: 100, 200, and 300 Hz. The signals were amplified using a Getting 5A
microelectrode amplifier and stored on a PC with pCLAMP software and a
DMA interface board (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA). Analysis was
performed on the PC using pCLAMP and Exel 97 software (Microsoft,
Redmond, WA).
Retrograde staining of motoneurons. To stain motor neurons
using neurobiotin, a technique similar to that of Trimarchi and Schneiderman (1994) and Trimarchi and Murphey (1997) was used. Distilled water (25 µl) was added to 0.1 mg of neurobiotin powder, and a 2-4 µl drop was placed on a slide. As it dried, a tungsten probe was pulled along the edge of the drop, coating the tip with crystals by capillary action. This was repeated with a second drop for
all probes. Flies were anesthetized using ether and waxed to a slide,
and an etched tungsten wire was used to poke a small hole in the
cuticle at the point of TTM attachment. The coated probe was then used
to apply crystals to the underlying muscle. Flies were then incubated
in a moist chamber for 15-20 min at room temperature to allow dye uptake.
After incubation the flies were partially dissected by removing the
legs at the base of the coxa, head, and abdomen and fixed over night in
4% paraformaldehyde at 4°C. The thoracic ganglia were removed and
rinsed three to four times in 0.1 M PB. The ganglia were
then washed in PBT for 2-3 hr at room temperature and in 100 mM PB for 15 min. Visualization of the staining was
achieved using an ABC kit (Vector Labs). A variation of the J. Adams
intensification method for 3,3'-diaminobenzidine-tetrahydrochloride
(DAB) (Adams, 1981 ) was used in which 10 mg of DAB (Sigma, St. Louis,
MO) was dissolved in 20 ml of 100 mM PB to which 0.5 ml of
1% CoCl2 and 0.4 ml of 1% nickel ammonium
sulfate
Ni(NH2)(SO4)2
were added. The solution was filtered and diluted 1:3 with 100 mM PB, and the ganglia were incubated for 3 min, then
washed briefly in 0.1 M PB. The ganglia were then further
incubated in DAB (0.3 mg/ml 0.1 M PB) with 0.3%
H2O2 for 6-10 min, rinsed
in 0.1 M PB, dehydrated through an ethanol series,
cleared in methylsalicylate, and mounted in Canada balsam.
Preparations were scored initially for heavy TTMn staining and those
that showed suitable staining were further scored twice independently
(one blind) for staining of the GFs. The results were then combined to
produce Table 2 (see Results).
Image capturing and processing. Images in several focal
planes were captured from whole-mount CNS preparations using a SPOT digital camera (Diagnostic Instruments, Sterling Heights, MI) and
imported into Adobe Photoshop 5.0 software (Adobe Systems, San Jose,
CA) on an Apple Macintosh G3 computer. Montages were then constructed
using the "clone tool" showing axonal projections that cross
several planes of focus in a single image. For the sectioned
preparation, an image of the relevant single section was captured using
the SPOT camera.
 |
RESULTS |
Overexpression of truncated Glued
(Gl ) in the giant fiber system causes
aberrant GF morphology
To selectively disrupt the dynein-dynactin complex in the giant
fiber system, we assembled a
UAS-Gl construct, by
cloning a truncated Glued cDNA into the pUAST vector. This
truncated transgene produces a "poison" protein product like that
produced by the Gl1 mutation
(Fan and Ready, 1997 ). Once introduced into flies by P element-mediated
transformation (see Materials and Methods), we then used the GAL4-UAS
system of Brand and Perrimon (1993) to achieve selective expression. We
used eye-specific GAL4 activators as an initial test for transgene
function. Crosses of sev-GAL4 (Basler et al., 1989 ) and
GMR-GAL4 (Freeman, 1996 ) to two independent UAS-Gl lines resulted in
progeny with reduced and rough eyes (data not shown). These eye
phenotypes were similar to disruptions in ommatidial formation and
array seen in Gl1/+ mutants
(Harte and Kankel, 1983 ; Fan and Ready, 1997 ). Interestingly, the
progeny from the GMR-GAL4 cross showed a more severe disruption in eye
formation than Gl1/+
heterozygotes, indicating that we could increase the dosage of poison
subunit above that of the heterozygous mutant flies.
To examine neural defects we expressed the truncated transgene with
GF-specific GAL4 activators. We used the previously characterized enhancer-trap A307 to express
Gl in neurons of the giant
fiber system. This P[GAL4] insert drives expression in the GF and
TTMn, before they make their synaptic connection, and has been used to
follow the development of the giant fiber system (Phelan et al., 1996 ;
Allen et al., 1998 ). In wild-type specimens, the adult GFs are seen as
large bilaterally symmetrical neurons that project from the brain to
the thoracic ganglia (Fig.
1A). Each soma can be
visualized near the dorsal surface of the brain; a thin neurite extends
posteriorly and ventrally from the cell body to the axon and dendritic
field. The largest dendritic branch is the posterior lateral dendrite
(Fig. 1B, arrowhead), and other, smaller
processes can be seen, including a dorsal medial branch that projects
into the giant commissural interneurons [J. A. Drummond, M. J. Allen, K. G. Moffat (1997) P[GAL4]-307 enhancer-trap pattern.
Flybrain on-line: http://www.flybrain.org. Accession number
AA00098]. The axon projects posteromedially and runs dorsally through the cervical connective into the thoracic ganglion and passes through the prothoracic neuromere (T1) and into the mesothoracic neuromere (T2), where it dives ventrally and bends laterally (Fig. 1C, arrowhead). It is along this distinctive bend
that synaptic contact with the large TTMn is made (Thomas and Wyman,
1982 ; Blagburn et al., 1999 ).

View larger version (93K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
Top. Expression of
Gl disrupts axon morphology in the
GFs. A, Diagram depicting the morphology of the
GFs in the CNS. Boxes indicate regions of the brain and
thoracic ganglia shown in B-E. The soma and dendrites
are located in the brain (box labeled
B&D). The axon and presynaptic terminal are located in
the second thoracic segment (box labeled
C&E). B, C, Whole-mount
preparations of the CNS from UAS-lacZ; A307 adult
flies. Immunocytochemistry has revealed LacZ reporter protein in the
GFs in the brain, including the cell bodies and the dendritic field
(B), and in the thoracic ganglia where the GFs
show their distinctive bends in the mesothoracic neuromere
(C, arrowhead). D,
E, Whole-mount preparations of the CNS from
UAS-lacZ;
A307/UAS-Gl adult flies. The
dendritic field is unaffected by
Gl (D);
however, the axon terminals exhibit large swellings and no bend
(E, asterisk). Scale bar, 20 µm.
Figure 2.
Left. Disruptions in axon morphology are
dependent on the dose of poison subunit. A, Whole-mount
adult thoracic ganglia from UAS-lacZ;
A307/UAS-Gl 96B
showing large terminal axon swellings. B, A 7 µm horizontal section through a UAS-lacZ;
A307/UAS-Gl 96B
adult thoracic ganglia showing a large vesicle devoid of reporter
protein within the swelling (asterisk).
C, Adult thoracic ganglia from UAS-lacZ;
A307; Gl 1/+ showing normal GF morphology.
D, Whole-mount adult thoracic ganglia from c17,
UAS-lacZ/UAS-Gl
showing lack of GF bending but less severe swelling than seen in
A. Scale bar, 20 µm.
Figure 3.
Right. Developmental analysis of mutant and
wild-type giant fibers. A, B, Dorsal views of
whole-mounted pupal thoracic nervous systems from control flies at 24 and 48 hr APF, respectively. Note the distinctive terminal bends in the
mesothoracic neuromere (T2) seen at 48 hr
(B, arrowhead). C, D,
Dorsal views of whole-mounted pupal thoracic nervous systems from flies
expressing Gl in the GFs at 24 and
48 hr APF, respectively. These mutant axons show no bends at 48 hr, and
small swellings can be seen at the axon tips (D,
asterisk). Scale bar, 20 µm.
|
|
Overexpression of the Gl in neurons of
the giant fiber system resulted in GFs that failed to show their
characteristic bends in the second thoracic neuromere, and their axons
had swellings at the terminals (Fig. 1E). Flies
carrying A307 and a UAS-lacZ reporter construct were
crossed to two independent
UAS-Gl lines
(UAS-Gl 84
and
UAS-Gl 96B),
and the adult GF morphology was examined by immunocytochemistry. In
both cases the GFs showed the same phenotype (Figs.
1E,
2A, Table
1). The bilaterally paired GF axons
project into T2 where they would normally meet their target neurons,
but they do not show the lateral bend. Instead the GF axons show
terminal swellings of up to three times the normal axon diameter. This
abnormal morphology was seen in >90% of preparations (Table 1). Light
microscopic sections through these axons show that they are distorted
by large vesicles that exclude the LacZ marker (Fig.
2B). Arborization of the dendritic field, however,
appears to be unaffected by
Gl expression (Fig.
1D).
In the GAL4-UAS system the poison subunit is expressed in a background
that contains two wild-type Glued alleles. We therefore looked at Glued 1 mutants in
which every cell contains one copy of the gene that synthesizes the
poison subunit and another that produces wild-type protein.
Interestingly, Gl1/+
heterozygotes show normal GF morphology (Fig. 2C, Table 1); therefore the dosage of mutant protein in these flies results in
normal, wild-type axon morphology.
When Gl was targeted to the
presynaptic cell the axon was disrupted
Because A307 expresses in both the GF and TTMn, we could not
determine the site of the defects. To test whether the effect on the GF
presynaptic terminal was caused by disrupting Glued function in the
presynaptic or both presynaptic and postsynaptic cells, a second
P[GAL4] line (c17) that expresses in the GF but not the TTMn was
used. This line shows weaker expression in the GF than A307 when
comparing the level of -LacZ antibody staining seen in preparations
processed in parallel. In the c17 enhancer- trap reporter protein
(LacZ) could be detected in the GF as early as 24 hr after puparium
formation (APF) if overstained, but expression was never seen in the
TTMn. These c17 flies were crossed to the two
UAS-Gl lines
(UAS-Gl 84
and
UAS-Gl 96B),
and the GFs in these animals were examined. The GFs did not show the
characteristic lateral bends and were often swollen at the distal tips
of the axons (Table 1). The defects in these c17 flies often appeared
less severe than those seen with A307 (Fig. 2, compare A and
D), consistent with the presumed strength of expression. In
summary, expression of
UAS-Gl in the GF alone
disrupts synaptogenesis.
Defects occur late in GF development
To understand the emergence of the defects in the GFs, we examined
the GF at various stages of metamorphosis. We dissected the CNS from
various pupal stages of A307;
UAS-Gl 96B
flies as well as from controls that contained only the enhancer-trap and the UAS-lacZ reporter construct. At 24 hr APF, the GFs
have grown through the brain down the connective into the
thoracic ganglia and reached the midpoint of T2 (Allen et al., 1998 ).
Both controls and experimental preparations show GFs at the midpoint of
T2 at 24 hr APF, but no difference is seen between controls and
experimentals (Fig.
3A,C).
This indicates that growth and pathfinding in the brain and
connective are unaffected by Gl .
At 48 hr APF (P7) (Bainbridge and Bownes, 1981 ), control GFs show the
characteristic bends (Fig. 3B) and are in contact with the
TTMn (Phelan et al., 1996 ; Allen et al., 1998 ). However, experimental GFs expressing
Gl 96B
remain at the midpoint of T2 and show no terminal bends. In addition, small swellings can be seen at the tips of the axons (Fig.
3D, arrowhead). At 72 hr APF (P9-10) (Bainbridge
and Bownes, 1981 ), all control preparations that were examined show
bends, and experimental axons show no bends, but small swellings
similar to those seen at 48 hr APF are present (data not shown). During
the remainder of pupal development, the GFs increase to their adult
diameter of ~7 µm (Fig. 1B). In axons expressing
Gl 96B,
the swellings increase markedly in size to give bulbs axon diameters that were several times the normal size (Figs. 1D,
2A). The dendritic fields of the experimental animals
show the normal sequence of arborization during all pupal stages
examined (data not shown).
Expression of Gl reduces or
abolishes GF-TTMn dye coupling
To begin to assess the function of the GF-TTM synapse in mutant
animals, we examined dye coupling between the TTM and GF. These two
neurons are known to be dye-coupled in wild type (Phelan et al., 1996 ),
and we therefore iontophoresed dye into the TTMn and looked for
coupling to the GF. To observe the adult morphology of the TTM neuron,
and to test for connections with other cells, we backfilled the neuron
from the TTM with neurobiotin. The control TTM was as described
previously (Swain et al., 1990 ). The motorneuron shows a large, lateral
cell body and three large characteristic processes: a medial dendrite,
a posterior dendrite, and an axon that exits the CNS via the anterior
dorsal medial nerve (Fig. 4A). The mutant
(Gl1/+) and transgenic
(Gl )
TTM neurons were not distinguishable from the wild type. In all specimens tested, the medial dendrite appeared normal and was in the
correct position to be in close apposition to the GF terminal.

View larger version (71K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
The strength of dye coupling is affected by the
truncated Glued protein. A, Iontophoresis of neurobiotin
into the TTM often led to dye filling of the GF in the
Gl1/+ heterozygotes
(arrow) just as is seen in the wild-type animals (Table
3). B, Expression of the truncated subunit under the
control of c17 had no detectable effect on dye coupling to the GF.
C, Many fewer specimens showed dye coupling to the GF
when the truncated Glued was expressed under the control of A307. See
also Table 3. Scale bar, 20 µm.
|
|
Neurobiotin was seen to move from the TTM into the GF in a manner
correlated with the presumed expression levels of the truncated Glued
protein (Table 2). Preparations were
scored for dye coupling to the GF (Fig.
4A,B, arrows) in a
double-blind procedure (see Materials and Methods). The stained
axon could be confirmed as the GF by following the neuron back up
to the connective where the axon is easily identifiable. The apparent
thinness of the giant axon therefore appears to be an artifact of the
retrograde filling procedure. In wild-type specimens, coupling between
TTM and the GF was often (90%) observed. In
Gl1/+ heterozygotes the dye
traveled into the GF in >90% of the specimens (Fig.
4A), which was similar to the results for control
specimens (88%, Table 2) (see also Phelan et al., 1996 ). In those
specimens where Gl was
expressed under control of the enhancer-trap showing weaker expression
(c17), the probability of dye coupling to the GF was 76%. Finally,
when Gl was expressed under
control of the strongest driver (A307), the number of specimens
exhibiting dye coupling dropped dramatically to 25%. Figure
4C shows an example in which no dye coupling from the TTMn
to the GF was observed. As a negative control we examined mutant
ShakingB2 specimens, which lack
gap junctions, and found no dye coupling to the GF (Table 2). In
summary, the dye coupling suggested that truncated Glued was disrupting
the gap junction component of the GF-TTM synapse.
Function of the giant fiber system is altered in flies expressing
Gl and in Glued
1 mutants
Synaptic transmission at the GF-TTMn connection was abnormal when
Gl 96B
was expressed in the GF, showing that overexpression of the Glued poison subunit disrupts the function of this synapse. Three
characteristics were used to assess synaptic function: response
latency, refractory period, and following frequency (see Materials and
Methods). In control flies, containing the P[GAL4] element or the
UAS-Gl 96B
construct alone, the stereotypical responses previously characterized for wild type (Tanouye and Wyman, 1980 ; Thomas and Wyman, 1982 ; Gorczyca and Hall, 1984 ) were seen; for TTM the latency is ~0.8 msec
(Fig. 5A1), for refractory
period 3-4 msec (Fig. 5A2), and for following frequency
80-100% at 250 Hz (Fig. 5A3). The DLM responses showed the
characteristically longer latency (~1.4 msec) of the disynaptic
pathway (Fig. 5A1), a correspondingly longer refractory
period of >4 msec (Fig. 5A2), and poor following at 250 Hz
(Fig. 5A3). Figure 5A shows sample recordings
from individuals, and pooled data are shown in Table
3.

View larger version (23K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5.
The Glued poison subunit disrupts the physiology
of the giant fiber system. A, Recordings from individual
control (A1-3),
Glued1 (A4-6),
and c17;
UAS-Gl 96B
(A7-9) animals. A1, A4,
A8, The latency for wild type is indicated in
A1, the beginning of stimulus is
indicated by the S, and the vertical line
represents the wild-type response latency for TTM (0.8 msec) and is
drawn through all recordings for comparison. The longer TTM latency
seen when the poison subunit was driven in the GF is highlighted with
an asterisk in A7. Note that the
disynaptic pathway to DLM remains constant in all three
genotypes (~1.4 msec). Five responses are overlapped in each frame.
A2, A5, A8, To determine
the refractory period, twin stimuli were given with a different
interstimulus interval (ISI) between the two (see Materials and
Methods). Five different ISI responses are shown overlaid for each
genotype with latencies of 10, 8, 6, 4, and 2 msec. A response to the
first stimulation is always seen, and the minimal refractory period for
TTM is 4 msec in controls, as well as in
Gl1/+. No second response is seen at
any of these frequencies in the c17;
UAS-Gl specimens
(A8, asterisk). A3,
A6, A9, For following frequency, a single
sweep of 10 stimuli with an ISI of 4 msec is shown. In the wild-type
animals, the TTM follows 1:1 (A6, *), but in the
Gl1/+ heterozygote and in the
transgenic c17 animals no repetitive firing occurs (A9,
*) Calibration: vertical scale bar, 20 mV for all traces; horizontal, 1 msec for Latency, 2 msec for Refractory
Period, and 10 msec for Following Frequency (250 Hz). B, Schematic representing the identified neurons of
the giant fiber system. Brain stimulation activates the GF, which in
turn activates two follower neurons in the thorax: the
tergotrochanteral motorneuron (TTMn) and the
peripherally synapsing interneuron (PSI). The GF
drives the tergotrochanteral muscle (TTM) through
a monosynaptic pathway (GF-TTMn) and the flight muscles
(DLMs) through a disynaptic pathway
(GF-PSI-DLMns). Responses were recorded
intracellularly from the TTM and a DLM.
|
|
We found that the severity of the physiological phenotype correlated
with expression levels, and they will be discussed in ascending order
of levels of expression. Heterozygous
Gl1/+ flies showed the least
effect and had a normal TTM response latency (0.8 msec) (Fig.
5A4) and refractory period (3-4 msec) (Fig.
5A5). However, repetitive stimulation resulted in TTM
response failures at 250 Hz (Fig. 5A6, asterisk).
This resulted in an average following frequency of only 42.9% (Table
3). When
Gl 96B
was expressed only presynaptically using c17, the adults showed changes
in all three parameters in TTM (Fig. 5A7-9). Individual flies showed variable TTM latencies ranging from wild type (0.8 msec)
to very long (>2 msec) (Fig. 5A7, asterisk),
with a mean of 1.36 msec. The refractory period was >10 msec (Fig.
5B8, asterisk), and the TTM followed at 250 Hz
with <40% reliability (Fig. 5B9, asterisk). In
contrast, DLM muscle response remained normal in all specimens (Fig.
5B7-9, Table 3). This normal DLM response was unexpected
because a structural study of Blagburn et al. (1999) shows the GF-PSI
synapse to be mixed in nature and very similar to the GF-TTMn synapse.
Interestingly, the bendless mutation shows a similar
phenotype, with a longer TTM response latency and no effect on the
GF-PSI-DLMn pathway (Thomas and Wyman, 1984 ). Our results therefore
suggest that Glued may be involved in the same synaptic
process, and we are currently looking for genetic interactions between
Glued1 and
bendless.
When Gl was expressed using
our strongest expressing line, A307, all adults tested showed altered
physiology, and some exhibited no response at all (Fig.
6). Those flies that did respond showed longer latencies ( = 2.38 msec) (Fig. 6A1,
asterisk) and reduced following frequency (Fig.
6A2, Table 3). Direct stimulation of the thoracic
ganglia, bypassing the GF, in the same preparation resulted in
reversion of the TTM to a short latency of 0.7 msec (Tanouye and Wyman,
1980 ) (Fig. 6A3, asterisk) and high
frequency after TTMn (Fig. 6A4). This direct
stimulation of T2 showed that the TTMn neuromuscular junction was
intact and that the defect was in the GF-TTMn synapse. Several of the
A307; UAS-Gl flies that
were tested gave no response in the TTM after brain stimulation (Fig.
6B1, asterisk). When the motorneuron was
then stimulated directly in the same preparation, the TTM response was
normal (Fig. 6B2). The failed response reflects the
most extreme defect caused by the Gl
protein in the giant fiber system; the GF-TTMn synapse was below threshold. The latency of the DLM was longer than wild type in all
preparations ( = 2.33 msec) (Fig. 6). Interestingly, it
remained long (>1.5 msec) on direct stimulation, indicating that the
motoneurons were affected (Fig.
6A3,B1,B2,
asterisks). A307 shows expression in many motoneurons and
therefore probably drives the poison subunit in the DLMns that could
affect the neuromuscular junctions. A307 also shows expression in the
TTMn (Allen et al., 1998 ), but antibody staining is weak, and we
therefore presume that TTMn is unaffected because it expresses a low
level of Gl .

View larger version (18K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6.
Strong expression of the Glued poison subunit
weakens or abolishes the GF-TTMn synapse but not the neuromuscular
junction. A, An experimental A307;
UAS-Gl 96B
specimen with a weakened synapse. The latency of the TTM synapse is
longer that normal (A1, *), and the following frequency
is much lower than normal (A2, *). When the motor
neurons were stimulated directly, the latency of the TTM response was
restored to a very short latency of 0.7 msec (A3,
B2, #), showing that the TTMn and its neuromuscular
junction are normal and the defect can be attributed to the GF-TTMn
synapse. B, Some specimens exhibit no TTM
response. In this specimen there was never a TTM response to GF
stimulation (B1, top trace asterisk). B2
shows that direct stimulation can still activate the TTMn and its
neuromuscular junction. C, Schematic representing the
methods of stimulation to test for a weakened or absent GF-TTMn
synapse. Calibration: vertical scale bar, 20 mV for all traces;
horizontal, 1 msec for Latency and 10 msec for
Following Frequency (250 Hz).
|
|
Does Glued1 affect chemical
synaptic transmission?
The results shown in Figures 5 and 6 indicate that repetitive
firing causes the GF-TTM synapse to fail at high (>100 Hz)
frequencies in Gl1/+ animals.
The Gl1/+ mutants have normal
response latencies ( = 0.80 msec) (Table 3) and refractory
periods ( = 4.14 msec) (Table 3) but a reduction in following
at 250 Hz stimulation (Fig. 5, Table 3). The adult TTMn neuromuscular
junction is very stable because muscle responses were seen even at 500 Hz on direct stimulation of the motorneuron (data not shown). We
therefore interpret lack of a muscle response at 250 Hz as a failure of
TTMn to reach threshold. Any depression at the synapse would therefore
be revealed by a lack of muscle response as the probability of reaching
threshold decreased.
To assess the repetitive firing more accurately, we tested each animal
with 10 bouts of 10 pulses at various frequencies. The results for
control (Canton-S) animals are shown in Figure 7A. At 100 Hz, the wild-type
specimens show almost no response decrement and respond to nearly every
stimulus, responding 9 of 10 times by the end of the series of 10 stimuli. As the frequency is increased to 200 and 300 Hz, a clear
response decrement or depression is recorded, with the plateau at
~70% for 200 Hz and near the 60% level at 300 Hz. In contrast, when
heterozygous Gl1/+ specimens
are tested, they exhibit more rapid depression curves and lower
plateaus (Fig. 7B). At 200 Hz the plateau is at 50% responsiveness, and at 300 Hz it is at 30% responsiveness. These curves of response decrement are reminiscent of depression at a
chemical synapse and suggest that the
Gl1 mutation is disrupting the
function of a chemical synapse.

View larger version (34K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7.
Glued1 mutation
compromises the chemical component of the GF-TTMn synapse.
A, The response of a control TTM to repetitive GF
stimulation at three frequencies. B, The response of the
TTM to repetitive firing of the GF in a
Gl1/+ specimen. Note the strong
depression at 200 and 300 Hz. C, Driving the
defective version of the tetanus toxin transgene has no affect on
repetitive firing. D, Expression of the tetanus toxin
light chain in the GF reduces the response to repetitive firing. Note
the similarity between these curves and the
Gl1/+ heterozygotes.
|
|
At 300 Hz, a clear dip in responsiveness was recorded at the second
stimulus, but the remainder of the curve appears to follow the
exponential normally seen for depression at chemical synapses. This
unresponsiveness to the second stimulation is highly reliable throughout our experiments, although it has not been described previously. We assume it is caused by activation of a local inhibitory pathway but have not examined it further.
The observed response curves indicate that the GF-TTMn synapse is
depressing in a manner similar to chemical synapses (Hill and Jin,
1998 ). We therefore targeted expression of tetanus toxin to the GFs
using line c17. This toxin inhibits chemical transmission in
Drosophila by cleaving synaptobrevin and thus preventing
evoked transmitter release (Sweeney et al., 1995 ). Specimens with
targeted expression of tetanus toxin show normal latencies and
refractory periods but exhibit more rapid response decrement (Fig.
7D) than the genetic controls (Fig. 7C) or the
Canton-S control (Fig. 7A). This result strongly suggests
that a component of the GF-TTM synapse is chemical and that it is
being inhibited but not abolished by the toxin. Equally important, the
tetanus toxin-treated specimens are very similar to the
Gl1/+ heterozygotes, suggesting
that Glued1 is disrupting a
chemical component of the synapse.
 |
DISCUSSION |
By targeting the expression of truncated Glued protein to the
giant fiber system, we have demonstrated that the retrograde motor is
needed to build a normal synaptic connection between two identified
neurons in the Drosophila CNS. In transgenic specimens expressing a truncated version of the p150 subunit of the
dynein-dynactin complex, GF axons show normal growth and pathfinding
out of the brain and into the thoracic ganglia where they stop at their
normal contact points. However, the GF fails to develop a normal
presynaptic terminal bend, the axon terminal becomes clogged with large
vesicles, and the terminal swells to several times the normal axon
diameter. Depending on dosage of the mutant protein, these GFs make
either very weak or no detectable synaptic connection with the TTMn. In
the transgenic animals, where we think the truncated protein is
expressed at the highest levels (A307), the specimens show the most
severe swelling of the presynaptic terminal, and as measured physiologically, often completely lack a synaptic connection and often
exhibit no dye coupling to the TTMn. In
Gl1/+ mutants, which appear to
express the lowest amount of truncated protein, a morphologically
normal presynaptic terminal is assembled, and dye coupling appears
normal but synaptic function is compromised. The physiological effects
seen in the Gl1/+ specimens,
normal latencies but very poor response to repetitive firing, is
reproduced by expressing the tetanus toxin light chain in the GFs. This
suggests that the chemical component of the synapse is more sensitive
to low levels of the poison subunit. Normal assembly of both the gap
junctional component and the chemical component of the mixed synaptic
connection is therefore dependent on the normality of function of the
dynactin complex.
Development of the synapse
The defect in GF bending is first seen at 48 hr APF, and the
appearance of large vesicles and swelling of the axon terminal begin at
about this time. GF-TTM contact in specimens has been made before the
time that these anatomical defects appear. Previous work at the light
microscope level suggested that the GF and TTMn have made anatomical
contact by 24 hr APF, and GF bending occurs before 48 hr APF (Allen et
al., 1998 ). In addition, dye injection of the GF axon has shown it to
be dye-coupled to the TTMn by 45 hr APF (Phelan et al., 1996 ).
We presume that the swelling of the GF is caused by accumulation of
transport vesicles at the distal tip of the axons, because the GFs have
stopped elongating and are unable to perform normal dynein-dynactin-mediated retrograde transport, and material
accumulates in the axon terminal. Disruption of retrograde transport
leads to swellings only in the distal axons and occurs only after the axon has reached the target region. This may reflect the fact that
little dynein-dynactin retrograde transport is needed during rapid
axonal outgrowth and becomes crucial only after the axons stops
growing. Experiments with cultured chick sympathetic neurons show a
fourfold increase in retrograde transport of organelles when axon
extension is blocked (Hollenbeck and Bray, 1987 ). In contrast, in
kinesin mutants the organelle jams occur spaced along the length of the
axons (Hurd and Saxton, 1996 ). We have looked at flies that express
Gl in the GFs in a
Gl1 background and thus have a
very high level of truncated Glued; these flies show more severe
defects in which large vesicles can be seen along the length of the GFs
(data not shown). This indicates that more severe disruption of the
retrograde machinery may lead to swellings closer to the cell body.
The GFs in Gl1/+ heterozygotes
show normal anatomy at the light microscope level. We presume that
there are sufficient wild-type dynein-dynactin complexes to enable
synaptogenesis to occur correctly. Our previous analysis of sensory
neurons in Gl1 mutants shows
defects in axon trajectory (Reddy et al., 1997 ; Murphey et al., 1999 ).
However, when Gl is targeted to these
sensory neurons, pathfinding and trajectory are normal, but the axon
bundles show varicosities where they make synaptic contacts (M. J. Allen, unpublished data). This is consistent with the results presented
here and suggests that the pathfinding defects seen in the sensory
neurons of Glued 1 animals are
attributable to abnormalities in the neuropil in which they are growing.
Models for synapse assembly and maturation
The results suggest two possible mechanisms that are not mutually
exclusive. On the one hand, the dynein-dynactin system may be required
for local cytoskeletal rearrangements that are necessary in the axon to
create the large presynaptic terminal of the GF. On the other hand, the
retrograde motor may be required for long distance signaling to the
nucleus to activate gene expression that is required for synapse maturation.
One of the distinguishing characteristics of the GF is the large
presynaptic region adjacent to the TTM dendrite (Blagburn et al.,
1999 ). This unusual structure suggests that local cytoskeletal rearrangements may be required for correct formation of this enlarged presynaptic terminal bend. Recent evidence suggests a role for the
retrograde motor machinery in the transport of microtubules in an
anterograde direction (Ahmad et al., 1998 ; Baas, 1999 ). This might be
achieved when the cargo-binding end of the dynein-dynactin complex is
anchored in the actin matrix, and thus ATP activation will cause the
microtubule to be propelled in an anterograde direction. This is
proposed as a mechanism for pushing microtubules into extending growth
cones during neurite extension (Baas, 1999 ). The data presented here do
not support a general role for dynein-dynactin in axonal outgrowth
because the defective GFs show normal axonal outgrowth and normal
arborization of the dendrites. However, the movement of microtubules
may be involved in more specific growth and rearrangement of the
cytoskeleton that is needed as the GF extends along the TTMn to make
synaptic contact in the terminal phases of synaptogenesis. A related
possibility is that the membrane accumulations that occur in the
transgenic animals prevent the normal assembly of the terminal
cytoskeleton as the axon enlarges and bends along the TTM dendrite.
A second possibility is that the retrograde motor carries a signal from
the axon tip back to the cell body where gene activation is required
for the GF-TTMn synapse to mature. Synaptogenesis and synapse
maturation require bidirectional communication between the synaptic
partners (Davis and Murphey, 1994 ) as well as bidirectional communication between synapse and soma within a neuron, and molecular motors are crucial to the intracellular processes (Brady, 1991 ; Tanaka
and Sabry, 1995 ). The TTMn might express a trophic signal on its
surface, which is endocytosed by the GF and transported back to the
soma where transcription is activated, and the gene products that are
synthesized lead to synapse maturation. By expressing Gl in the GF, we have disabled the
retrograde machinery and prevented or reduced the amount of the
putative signal reaching the cell body. This lack of modulation of gene
expression might then cause a failure in maturation of the synapse with TTMn.
We cannot distinguish between a local modulation of the cytoskeleton
and long distance modulation of gene expression, and both may be
involved. The models we propose are very close to the models for
classical retrograde signals, such as nerve growth factor (NGF). Some
of NGF's effects depend on the retrograde movement of the NGF-TrkA
receptor complex from synapse to soma, whereas others are much more
local and affect axon terminal growth without reference to the nucleus
(Campenot, 1994 ).) There is relatively little evidence for NGF or its
receptor in Drosophila (Hayashi et al., 1992 ; Wilson et al.,
1993 ), and we are currently testing other candidate molecules that have
the requisite properties to play the neurotrophic role in
Drosophila.
Nature of the GF synapses
Recently Blagburn et al. (1999) used electron microscopy to
investigate the nature of the GF-TTMn synapse in wild-type and ShakingB2 mutants (that lack
gap junctions) and showed the presence of vesicles and other features
of a chemical synaptic transmission. Our data support these findings
because expression of tetanus toxin lowered the reliability of
the synapse in a manner consistent with weakening chemical
transmission. We were surprised to observe these effects, because it
has always been assumed that the tight electrical coupling between GF
and TTMn was sufficient to drive the synapse at high frequencies. Our
results suggest the contrary: the chemical component is important for
normal repetitive function. The dose-dependent responses of the GF
leave open the possibility of acute effects on membrane recycling or
transmitter release.
Because Blagburn et al. (1999) revealed that both GF-TTMn and GF-PSI
were mixed synapses, the differential effect of
Gl on these two synapses is surprising
and indicates that there are differences between the two. This could be
attributable to the proportions of the electrical and chemical
components. The GF-TTMn pathway may be more dependent on chemical
transmission than GF-PSI. Interestingly, Shaking
B2 (passover) mutants
show no GF-PSI-DLMn pathway when tested electrophysiologically (Thomas and Wyman, 1984 ), indicating that it is heavily reliant on gap
junctions but a long-latency GF-TTMn pathway, suggesting the
possibility of a remaining chemical component.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received June 4, 1999; revised Aug. 9, 1999; accepted Aug. 13, 1999.
This work was supported by grants to R.K.M. from National Institutes of
Health (NS15571) and the National Science Foundation (IBN 9514701). We
thank Dr. Randall Phyllis, Dr. Ulrich Thomas, and Dan Osuch for
comments on this manuscript. The UAS-tetanus toxin flies were kindly
provided by Dr. Sean Sweeney (University of Cambridge).
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Marcus J. Allen, Department
of Biology, Morrill Science Center, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003. E-mail:
mjallen{at}bio.umass.edu.
 |
REFERENCES |
-
Adams JC
(1981)
Heavy metal intensification of DAB-based HRP reaction product.
J Histochem Cytochem
29:775[ISI][Medline].
-
Ahmad FJ,
Echeverri CJ,
Vallee RB,
Baas PW
(1998)
Cytoplasmic dynein and dynactin are required for the transport of microtubules into the axon.
J Cell Biol
140:391-401[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Allan V
(1996)
Motor proteins: a dynamic duo.
Curr Biol
6:630-633[ISI][Medline].
-
Allen MJ,
Drummond JA,
Moffat KG
(1998)
Development of the giant fiber neuron of Drosophila melanogaster.
J Comp Neurol
397:519-531[ISI][Medline].
-
Baas PW
(1999)
Microtubules and neuronal polarity: lessons from mitosis.
Neuron
22:23-31[ISI][Medline].
-
Bainbridge SP,
Bownes M
(1981)
Staging the metamorphosis of Drosophila melanogaster.
J Embryol Exp Morphol
66:57-80[ISI][Medline].
-
Basler K,
Siegrist P,
Hafen E
(1989)
The spatial and temporal expression pattern of sevenless is exclusively controlled by gene-internal elements.
EMBO J
8:2381-2386[ISI][Medline].
-
Blagburn JM,
Alexopoulos H,
Davies JA,
Bacon JP
(1999)
Null mutation in shaking-B eliminates electrical, but not chemical, synapses in the Drosophila giant fiber system: a structural study.
J Comp Neurol
404:449-458[ISI][Medline].
-
Brady ST
(1991)
Molecular motors in the nervous system.
Neuron
7:521-533[ISI][Medline].
-
Brand AH,
Perrimon N
(1993)
Targeted gene-expression as a means of altering cell fates and generating dominant phenotypes.
Development
118:401-415[Abstract].
-
Campenot RB
(1994)
NGF and the local control of nerve terminal growth.
J Neurobiol
25:599-611[ISI][Medline].
-
Davis GW,
Murphey RK
(1994)
Long-term regulation of short-term release properties: retrograde signaling and synaptic development.
Trends Neurosci
17:9-13[ISI][Medline].
-
Engel JE,
Wu CF
(1996)
Altered habituation of an identified escape circuit in Drosophila memory mutants.
J Neurosci
16:3486-3499[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Fan SS,
Ready DF
(1997)
Glued participates in distinct microtubule-based activities in Drosophila eye development.
Development
124:1497-1507[Abstract].
-
Freeman M
(1996)
Reiterative use of the EGF receptor triggers differentiation of all cell types in the Drosophila eye.
Cell
87:651-660[ISI][Medline].
-
Gho M,
McDonald K,
Ganetzky B,
Saxton WM
(1992)
Effects of kinesin mutations on neuronal functions.
Science
258:313-316[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Gindhart Jr JG,
Desai CJ,
Beushausen S,
Zinn K,
Goldstein LS
(1998)
Kinesin light chains are essential for axonal transport in Drosophila.
J Cell Biol
141:443-454[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Gorczyca M,
Hall JC
(1984)
Identification of a cholinergic synapse in the giant fiber pathway of Drosophila using conditional mutations of acetylcholine synthesis.
J Neurogenet
1:289-313[Medline].
-
Harte PJ,
Kankel DR
(1983)
Analysis of visual system development in Drosophila melanogaster: mutations at the Glued locus.
Dev Biol
99:88-102[ISI][Medline].
-
Hayashi I,
Perez-Magallanes M,
Rossi JM
(1992)
Neurotrophic factor-like activity in Drosophila.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun
184:73-79[ISI][Medline].
-
Hill AA,
Jin P
(1998)
Regulation of synaptic depression rates in the cricket cercal sensory system.
J Neurophysiol
79:1277-1285[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Hirokawa N
(1998)
Kinesin and dynein superfamily proteins and the mechanism of organelle transport.
Science
279:519-526[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Hollenbeck PJ,
Bray D
(1987)
Rapidly transported organelles containing membrane and cytoskeletal components: their relation to axonal growth.
J Cell Biol
105:2827-2835[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Holleran EA,
Karki S,
Holzbaur EL
(1998)
The role of the dynactin complex in intracellular motility.
Int Rev Cytol
182:69-109[ISI][Medline].
-
Hurd DD,
Saxton WM
(1996)
Kinesin mutations cause motor neuron disease phenotypes by disrupting fast axonal transport in Drosophila.
Genetics
144:1075-1085[Abstract].
-
Hurd DD,
Stern M,
Saxton WM
(1996)
Mutation of the axonal transport motor kinesin enhances paralytic and suppresses Shaker in Drosophila.
Genetics
142:195-204[Abstract].
-
Karki S,
Holzbaur ELF
(1995)
Affinity-chromatography demonstrates a direct binding between cytoplasmic dynein and the dynactin complex.
J Biol Chem
270:28806-28811[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
King DG,
Wyman RJ
(1980)
Anatomy of the giant fiber pathway in Drosophila. I. Three thoracic components of the pathway.
J Neurocytol
9:753-770[ISI][Medline].
-
McGrail M,
Gepner J,
Silvanovich A,
Ludmann S,
Serr M,
Hays TS
(1995)
Regulation of cytoplasmic dynein function in-vivo by the Drosophila Glued complex.
J Cell Biol
131:411-425[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Murphey RK,
Caruccio P,
Getzinger M,
Westgate PJ,
Phillis RW
(1999)
Dynein-dynactin function and sensory axon growth during Drosophila metamorphosis: a role for retrograde motors.
Dev Biol
209:86-97[ISI][Medline].
-
Phelan P,
Nakagawa M,
Wilkin MB,
Moffat KG,
O'Kane CJ,
Davies JA,
Bacon JP
(1996)
Mutations in shaking-B prevent electrical synapse formation in the Drosophila giant fiber system.
J Neurosci
16:1101-1113[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Phillis R,
Statton D,
Caruccio P,
Murphey RK
(1996)
Mutations in the 8 kDa dynein light-chain gene disrupt sensory axon projections in the Drosophila imaginal CNS.
Development
122:2955-2963[Abstract].
-
Reddy S,
Jin P,
Trimarchi J,
Caruccio P,
Phillis RW,
Murphey RK
(1997)
Mutant molecular motors disrupt neural circuits in Drosophila.
J Neurobiol
33:711-723[ISI][Medline].
-
Riccio A,
Pierchala BA,
Ciarallo CL,
Ginty DD
(1997)
An NGF-TrkA-mediated retrograde signal to transcription factor CREB in sympathetic neurons.
Science
277:1097-1100[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Spradling AC,
Rubin GM
(1983)
The effect of chromosomal position on the expression of the Drosophila xanthine dehydrogenase gene.
Cell
34:47-57[ISI][Medline].
-
Swain GP,
Wyman RJ,
Egger MD
(1990)
A deficiency chromosome in Drosophila alters neuritic projections in an identified motoneuron.
Brain Res
535:147-150[ISI][Medline].
-
Swaroop A,
Paco-Larson ML,
Garen A
(1985)
Molecular genetics of a transposon-induced dominant mutation in the Drosophila locus Glued.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
82:1751-1755[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Sweeney ST,
Broadie K,
Keane J,
Niemann H,
O'Kane CJ
(1995)
Targeted expression of tetanus toxin light-chain in Drosophila specifically eliminates synaptic transmission and causes behavioral defects.
Neuron
14:341-351[ISI][Medline].
-
Tanaka E,
Sabry J
(1995)
Making the connection: cytoskeletal rearrangements during growth cone guidance.
Cell
83:171-176[ISI][Medline].
-
Tanouye MA,
Wyman RJ
(1980)
Motor outputs of giant nerve fiber in Drosophila.
J Neurophysiol
44:405-421[Free Full Text].
-
Thomas JB,
Wyman RJ
(1982)
A mutation in Drosophila alters normal connectivity between two identified neurons.
Nature
298:650-651[Medline].
-
Thomas JB,
Wyman RJ
(1983)
Normal and mutant connectivity between identified neurons in Drosophila.
Trends Neurosci
6:214-219[ISI].
-
Thomas JB,
Wyman RJ
(1984)
Mutations altering synaptic connectivity between identified neurons in Drosophila.
J Neurosci
4:530-538[Abstract].
-
Trimarchi JR,
Murphey RK
(1997)
The shaking-B2 mutation disrupts electrical synapses in a flight circuit in adult Drosophila.
J Neurosci
17:4700-4710[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Trimarchi JR,
Schneiderman AM
(1994)
The motor neurons innervating the direct flight muscles of Drosophila melanogaster are morphologically specialized.
J Comp Neurol
340:427-443[ISI][Medline].
-
Trimarchi JR,
Jin P,
Murphey RK
(1999)
Controlling the motor neuron.
Int Rev Neurobiol
43:241-264[ISI][Medline].
-
Vaughan KT,
Vallee RB
(1995)
Cytoplasmic dynein binds dynactin through a direct interaction between the intermediate chains and Pl50(Glued).
J Cell Biol
131:1507-1516[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Waterman-Storer CM,
Holzbaur ELF
(1996)
The product of the Drosophila gene, Glued, is the functional homolog of the P150(Glued) component of the vertebrate dynactin complex.
J Biol Chem
271:1153-1159[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Waterman-Storer CM,
Karki SB,
Kuznetsov SA,
Tabb JS,
Weiss DG,
Langford GM,
Holzbaur EL
(1997)
The interaction between cytoplasmic dynein and dynactin is required for fast axonal transport.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
94:12180-12185[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Wilson C,
Goberdhan DCI,
Stellar H
(1993)
Dror, a potential neurotrophic receptor gene, encodes a Drosophila homolog of the vertebrate Ror family of Trk-related receptor tyrosine kinases.
Proc Natl Acad USA
90:7109-7113[Abstract/Free Full Text].
Copyright © 1999 Society for Neuroscience |