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The Journal of Neuroscience, June 15, 2002, 22(12):4906-4917
Dendritic Remodeling and Growth of Motoneurons during
Metamorphosis of Drosophila melanogaster
Christos
Consoulas,
Linda L.
Restifo, and
Richard B.
Levine
Arizona Research Laboratories, Division of Neurobiology, University
of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721
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ABSTRACT |
Insect motoneurons display dramatic dendritic plasticity during
metamorphosis. Many larval motoneurons survive to adulthood but undergo
dendritic regression and outgrowth as they are incorporated into
developing circuits. This study explores the dendritic remodeling and
development of Drosophila motoneurons MN1-MN5, which
innervate indirect flight muscles of the adult. MN1-MN5 are persistent
larval neurons exhibiting two distinct metamorphic histories. MN1-MN4 are born in the embryo, innervate larval muscles, and undergo dendritic
regression and regrowth during metamorphosis. MN5, which was identified
through a combination of intracellular dye injection and retrograde
staining at all stages, is also born embryonically but remains
developmentally arrested until the onset of metamorphosis. In the
larva, MN5 lacks dendrites, and its axon stops in the mesothoracic nerve without innervating a target muscle. It is dye coupled to the
peripherally synapsing interneuron, which will become part of the giant
fiber escape circuit of the adult fly. During pupal development, MN5
undergoes de novo dendritic growth and extension of its
axon to innervate the developing target muscle. Its unique developmental history and identifiability make MN5 well suited for the
study of dendritic growth using genetic and neurophysiological approaches.
Key words:
insect; motor neuron; dendrite; dendritic plasticity; CNS; spine; indirect flight muscles
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INTRODUCTION |
The formation of precise dendritic
shapes during development has important consequences for the
integration and transmission of information in the nervous system.
Modifications in dendritic architecture in the mature nervous system
can either refine or impair the function of neural circuits (Bottjer
and Arnold, 1997 ; Woolley, 1998 ; McEwen, 1999 ; Cameron and
Nuñez-Abades, 2000 ; Swann et al., 2000 ; Cline, 2001 ; Poirazi and
Mel, 2001 ). Dendrites of CNS neurons of holometabolous insects are
remodeled during metamorphosis to allow the production of
stage-specific behavior (Levine et al., 1995 ). In the moth
Manduca sexta, many larval motoneurons survive to function
as elements of the adult CNS. Persistent motoneurons undergo severe
dendritic pruning during the larval-to-pupal transition, followed by
dendritic growth during adult development (Levine and Truman, 1982 ,
1985 ; Thorn and Truman, 1989 ; Weeks and Ernst-Utzschneider, 1989 ; Kent
and Levine, 1993 ; Consoulas et al., 2000 ; Duch and Levine, 2000 ).
Motoneuron dendritic remodeling is regulated by the steroid hormone
20-hydroxyecdysone (for review, see Levine and Weeks, 1990 ; Weeks and
Levine, 1990 ; Levine et al., 1995 ), but the molecular mechanisms remain unknown.
Another holometabolous insect, Drosophila melanogaster,
undergoes equally spectacular behavioral changes but also offers
molecular genetic tools for exploring the signals and transduction
pathways that regulate dendritic shape and plasticity (Gao et al.,
1999 ). Little is known, however, about dendritic remodeling of
identified neurons in Drosophila because of the experimental
restrictions imposed by the small size of the animal and its CNS. Thus,
the goal of this study was to establish a model system that will allow high-resolution analysis of dendritic structure of individually identified central neurons of Drosophila.
Here, by using intracellular staining and axonal tracing techniques, we
determined the developmental histories of motoneurons MN1-MN5, which
innervate the dorsolongitudinal indirect flight muscles (DLM) in the
adult fly (Coggshall, 1978 ; King and Wyman, 1980 ; Costello and Wyman,
1986 ; Ikeda and Koenig, 1988 ; Sun and Wyman, 1997 ). The DLMs develop
from three larval dorsal mesothoracic body wall muscles, which, unlike
other thoracic muscles, escape histolysis during the larval-to-pupal
transition (Shatoury, 1956 ; Costello and Wyman, 1986 ; Fernandes
et al., 1991 ). In the prepupa and early pupa, the motor nerve that
innervates the dorsal larval mesothoracic muscles remains in contact
with the larval templates and, in later pupal stages, grows over the
developing DLMs (Fernandes and Vijayraghavan, 1993 ). The continuous
nerve-muscle association during metamorphosis suggests that DLMs are
innervated by persistent larval neurons, but MN1-MN5 had never been
identified at larval or prepupal stages. This was a prerequisite for
determining their origins and developmental histories.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Drosophila strains and culture. Canton-S was the
wild-type laboratory strain as in previous studies of CNS metamorphosis
(Restifo and White, 1991 ; Restifo et al., 1995 ; Restifo and Hauglum,
1998 ). Experimental animals were cultured on standard corn
flour-yeast-agar medium (Elgin and Miller, 1978 ) at
25oC, 50-80% relative humidity.
5-Bromo-2-deoxyuridine (BrdU) (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) was used to label
cells undergoing DNA synthesis. BrdU was added to the culture medium at
a concentration of 0.1 mg BrdU/ml (Truman and Bate, 1988 ). Animals were
continuously exposed to BrdU throughout larval development. Wandering
third instar larvae were dissected and processed for BrdU
immunocytochemistry as described previously (Consoulas and Levine,
1997 ).
White prepupae (P1, according to the staging criteria of Bainbridge and
Bownes, 1981 ) were selected from culture vials, placed on moistened
ashless filter paper (catalog #42; Whatman, Maidstone, UK) in
glass dishes, and allowed to continue developing at 25°C in a humid
chamber for varying numbers of hours after puparium formation (hr APF).
Under these conditions, pupation takes places at 12 hr APF on average,
with a range of 11-13 hr APF (L. L. Restifo and W. Hauglum,
unpublished observation). Eclosion takes place at ~100 hr APF.
A number of P[GAL4] enhancer-detector transgenes (Brand
and Perrimon, 1993 ) were used to label CNS landmarks. GAL4 expression was localized by crossing to flies homozygous for a second-chromosome insertion of the reporter construct, P[UAS-GFP.S65T],
encoding mutant green fluorescent protein (GFP) (Cubitt et al.,
1995 ). The GFP construct and transgenic line were made by B. Dickson (University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; FlyBase accession number FBrf0086268), and the stock was provided by K. Ito (National Institute for Basic Biology, Myodaiji, Okazaki, Japan).
P[GAL4]103.3 is a second-chromosome insertion (cytogenetic
map location 48C3-5), identified in a screen by the Nambu and Murphey laboratories (University of Massachusetts-Amherst, Amherst, MA), that
drives expression in adult indirect flight muscle motoneurons (R. Murphey, personal communication). DLM motoneuron expression does
not begin until 35 hr APF (data not shown).
Retrograde and anterograde nerve filling technique. The
animals were anesthetized by chilling on ice for 3-5 min. Pupae were removed from their puparia before dissection. Animals were pinned with
dorsal side up on Sylgard-coated (Dow Corning, Midland, MI) Petri
dishes containing HL3 saline (Stewart et al., 1994 ). The heads of late
pupae and adults were removed. Larvae, prepupae and early pupae (until
18 hr APF) were dissected along the right dorsolateral region to leave
the left hemisegments intact. For later pupal stages and the adult, the
animals were dissected along the dorsal midline. The gut, salivary
glands, fat bodies, and trachea were removed. For retrograde labeling
of the motoneurons in the larva, prepupa, and early pupa, the specific
branch of the nerve containing the motoneurons innervating the DLMs or
their precursors was isolated together with its target muscles in a petroleum jelly pool to allow the uptake of dye [5% w/v
rhodamine-dextran at 3000 or 10,000 kDa in distilled water (Molecular
Probes, Eugene, OR) or 3% w/v biocytin in distilled water (Sigma)].
For anterograde staining of the peripheral processes of the
mesothoracic (T2) neurons, the whole CNS, with only the T2 nerve
attached, was isolated in a petroleum jelly pool with the dyes
(Consoulas et al., 1996 ). The rhodamine-dextran-labeled preparations
were stored at 4°C for 3-7 hr or at room temperature (RT) for a
maximum of 3 hr in the dark. The biocytin preparations were stored in
4°C for 5-10 hr. All preparations were fixed in 2.5% formaldehyde
and 3% sucrose in PBS, pH 7.3, for 2-5 hr at RT in the dark. The
rhodamine-dextran preparations were washed in PBS after fixation and
mounted in 80% glycerol in PBS. Biocytin preparations were washed in
PBS, pH 7.3, and PBS-Tx (0.4% Triton X-100 in PBS, pH 7.3) and then incubated in 1:2000 Cy3- or Cy5-conjugated Streptavidin (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA) in PBS-Tx for 2 hr at RT in the dark.
Preparations were mounted in 80% glycerol in PBS. After fixation (see
above), filamentous actin within the muscles was labeled with 66 nM Oregon Green-phalloidin (Molecular Probes) in
PBS for 30 min at RT (Consoulas and Levine, 1998 ).
Intracellular staining technique. Larvae, prepupae, and
young pupae (up to 35 hr APF) were prepared as described above. To identify MN5 and the X neuron (see Results) the T2 nerve was first backfilled with 3000 kDa rhodamine-dextran. After dye infusion for 25-90 min at RT in the dark, the preparation was transferred to a
different dish and pinned on a Sylgard platform to allow impalement. In
pupae past 35 hr APF and adults, it was possible to visually locate the
MN5 cell body using transmitted light and differential interference
contrast optics, based on its size and position in the CNS. In
addition, in P103.3 pupae older than 35 hr APF and adults,
the cell body of MN5 was located by its GFP expression. An Olympus
Optical (Tokyo, Japan) microscope (BX50WI) equipped with fluorescent
optics and 10 and 60× water-immersion objectives was used. In larvae,
prepupae, and early pupae up to 18 hr APF, the CNS sheath was removed
mechanically with a fine pair of forceps. For late pupal stages (past
60 hr APF) and adults, the CNS sheath was treated with 1% w/v pronase
(Sigma) in saline. For pupae between 18 and 60 hr APF, the sheath was
thin enough to allow penetration by microelectrodes without any
mechanical or chemical treatment. Thin-walled borosilicate electrodes
(resistance of 60-80 M ) were used to impale the neurons. The tips
of the electrodes were filled with either 3% Lucifer yellow (Sigma) in 2 M lithium chloride (from wandering larvae to 25 hr APF) or 3% w/v Neurobiotin (Sigma) in 2 M
potassium acetate. The electrode shafts were filled with 2 M lithium chloride (Lucifer yellow electrodes) or
2 M potassium acetate (Neurobiotin electrodes).
An air bubble was left between the tip and the shaft to prevent dye
dilution. After intracellular penetration, Lucifer yellow was injected
iontophoretically by applying 0.1-1.0 nA hyperpolarizing current for
10 min to 1 hr. Neurobiotin was injected by applying depolarizing
current pulses of 1 nA and 400 msec duration with a frequency of 1 Hz for 5-15 min. Subsequently, the preparations were fixed and washed in
PBS. Neurobiotin preparations were processed as above. Preparations were mounted in 80% glycerol in PBS.
Confocal microscopy. Digital images were captured on a Nikon
(Tokyo, Japan) PCM 2000 laser-scanning confocal microscope using Simple
PCI (Compix, Tualatin, OR) image acquisition software. Preparations
were scanned with helium-neon laser lines with excitation maxima at
543 nm (Cy3) and 650 nm (Cy5) using long-pass filters at 565 and 650 nm, respectively, and with an argon laser line with an excitation
maximum at 488 nm (GFP, fluorescein, and OR Green-phalloidin) using a
bandpass filter at 500-530 nm. Images were assembled using Corel Draw
8 software (Corel, Ottawa, Ontario).
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RESULTS |
Comparison of motoneurons in the larva and adult
Our ability to determine the developmental histories of the DLM
motoneurons relied on a combination of intracellular staining and
diffusion of dyes through cut motor axons (retrograde or anterograde staining). Whereas previous studies relied on HRP injection into the
target muscles to identify the adult flight motoneurons (Ikeda and
Koenig, 1988 ; Trimarchi and Schneiderman, 1994a ), this approach would
not suffice for our studies of earlier developmental stages in which
the targets were unknown. Furthermore, as will be shown, previous
retrograde staining facilitated greatly our subsequent ability to
record intracellularly from MN5 of early developmental stages. Initial
experiments tested the reliability of the staining technique by
confirming the identity of the adult DLM motoneurons. Anterograde
(toward the periphery) staining of the posterior branch of the dorsal
mesothoracic nerve (PDMN) (Power, 1948 ) in the adult revealed that its
distalmost branch is purely motor, containing the axons of the neurons
innervating the six DLM fibers (Fig. 1A). Retrograde
staining of the distalmost PDMN branch in the adult revealed the
position and dendritic architecture of five motoneurons (MN1-MN5)
(Fig. 1B,C) and of one ventral
unpaired median neuron (VUM) (Fig. 1C) in the adult CNS. The
cell bodies of MN1-MN4 are located ventrally in the prothoracic
neuromere (T1) ipsilateral to the target muscle (Fig. 1C).
The cell body of MN5 is located dorsally in the mesothoracic (T2)
neuromere on the contralateral side (Fig. 1B). The
cell body of the VUM neuron is located posteriorly in the T2 neuromere
at the ventral midline (Fig. 1C, VUM). The
elaborate dendritic fields of MN1-MN5 are located dorsally on both
ipsilateral and contralateral sides of the mesothoracic neuromere (Fig.
1B).

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Figure 1.
Innervation of the dorsal thoracic muscles in the
larva and of the DLMs in the adult. All panels are
projections of confocal optical sections (z = 0.6 µm in B, C, E-G;
z = 1.5 µm in A, D)
taken from adult (A-C) and larval
(D-G) stages of P103.3/UAS-GFP
animals. In all panels, anterior is to the
top. Dotted lines in B,
C, F, and G indicate the
CNS midline. The GFP reporter (green in
B, C, F, G)
labels MN1-MN5 in the adult, among other neurons. The motoneurons
innervating the dorsal muscles do not express GFP in the larva,
although many other neurons do, providing a useful marker for the CNS
midline. A, Anterograde staining (red) of
the PDMN nerve revealed the innervation pattern of the six DLM fibers
(see numbers) in the adult. B,
C, Retrograde staining (red) of the
distalmost branch of PDMN, which specifically innervates the DLMs,
revealed MN5 (B, dorsal view), MN1-MN4, and the VUM
neuron (C, ventral view) in the adult CNS.
Arrow in B indicates the axon of the VUM
neurons exiting the contralateral mesothoracic nerve. D,
Anterograde staining of the T2 nerve revealed the innervation pattern
of the larval mesothoracic muscles. The encircled area
indicates the distalmost branch of the ISN just past the exit of
the sensory (sen) branch. E,
High-magnification view of the encircled area in
D showing the six motor axons innervating the dorsal
muscles exclusively. F, G, Retrograde
staining of the distalmost ISN nerve revealed two ipsilateral dorsal
neurons (IDa and IDp) (F, dorsal view) and four ventral
ipsilateral neurons (MN1-MN4), along with a VUM neuron
(G, ventral view) innervating the larval mesothoracic
dorsal muscles. Note in F the contralateral dendrites
(dotted circle) and the absence of a contralateral cell
body. Arrow in F indicates the axon of
the VUM neurons exiting the contralateral mesothoracic nerve. The
peripheral nerves in A, D, and
E were stained anterogradely with rhodamine-dextran 3 kDa (A) or biocytin (D,
E). The biocytin staining in D and
E was revealed with Cy3-conjugated Streptavidin. In
A and D, the filamentous actin of the
muscles was revealed with Oregon Green-phalloidin. In
B, C, F, and
G, the neurons in the CNS were retrogradely stained with
rhodamine-dextran 3 kDa. DM, Dorsal midline
ISN(T2), intersegmental nerve of the mesothoracic
segment; ant, anterior.
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In the larva, anterograde nerve fills of the mesothoracic nerve (T2)
revealed that the dorsal muscles are innervated by the distalmost
branch of the intersegmental nerve (ISN) (Fig. 1D) (Fernandes and Vijayraghavan, 1993 ). Six large axonal profiles and
usually a thin seventh axon, probably belonging to the VUM neuron, were
visible in this nerve branch (Fig. 1E,
inset). Retrograde staining of the same nerve branch
revealed seven neurons in the larval CNS (Fig.
1F,G). Two of the neurons had cell
bodies located dorsally, close to the midline in the ipsilateral
mesothoracic neuromere [ipsilateral dorsal neurons a (anterior) (IDa)
and p (posterior) (IDp)] (Fig. 1F). The cell bodies
of four neurons were located ventrally, in the ipsilateral prothoracic
neuromere (Fig. 1G). One neuron with a bifurcating axon,
characteristic of unpaired neurons that project to both sides of the
body, had its cell body in the ventral midline (Fig. 1G,
VUM). The dendrites of all motoneurons were located
ipsilaterally in the dorsal region, with the exception of one of the
ventral motoneurons, which also had a dorsal dendritic field on the
contralateral side (Fig. 1F, dotted
circle). Judging from the position of the neuronal cell bodies in
the larva, the four ventral-ipsilateral motoneurons may correspond to
the adult MN1-MN4. Similarly, the larval VUM neuron may survive to the
adult stage to innervate the DLMs.
Because no larval neuron with a contralateral cell body was found to
innervate the dorsal muscles, the origin of the adult MN5 was not
obvious. One hypothesis is that MN5 is born during larval life.
Alternatively, the IDa or IDp neuron may migrate during metamorphosis
to the contralateral side of the CNS to become MN5, or MN5 may be a
larval motoneuron innervating muscles other than those in the dorsal
body wall. Finally, MN5 may be present in the larva but have no muscle
target. The following experiments resolved this issue.
Changes in the larval population of motoneurons
during metamorphosis
The retrograde labeling technique provided novel
information about changes in the population of larval motoneurons
during the early stages of metamorphosis. The number of primary ISN
nerve branches did not change during metamorphosis. As in the larval stage, the distalmost ISN branch innervated the DLM templates in the
prepupa and the developing DLMs in the pupa (our unpublished observations) (Fernandes and Vijayraghavan, 1993 ). Retrograde fills
from this branch in the late larval and very early prepupal stages
(0-2 hr APF) revealed no changes from the larval number, position, and
dendritic pattern of the efferent neurons. However, regression of
dendrites began by 2 hr APF and was completed by 4 hr APF (Fig.
2B-D). Within the next
two hours (4-6 hr APF) all larval thoracic muscles degenerated, with
the exception of the three DLM template fibers. The four
ipsilateral-ventral motoneurons and the VUM neuron were still present
in nerve fills, but the two dorsal ipsilateral motoneurons (IDa and
IDp) disappeared sequentially, with IDa first, followed by IDp (Fig.
2D-F). These two larval neurons were not
present in whole-T2 nerve fills, as well, suggesting that they
degenerate.

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Figure 2.
Metamorphic remodeling of thoracic motoneurons.
A-J, Projections of confocal optical sections
(z = 0.6 µm) from P103.3/UAS-GFP
animals at stages indicated in the top right of each
panel. The branch of the intersegmental nerve (to the
left of each image) that innervates the developing DLMs
exclusively was stained retrogradely with rhodamine-dextran 3 kDa. The
rhodamine signal is shown; the GFP-labeled cells (data not shown) were
used to identify the midline (dotted line) and segment
borders. All of the images, except inset in
I, are dorsal views of the CNS, showing the dorsal cell
bodies and the axons and dendritic arbors of all the motoneurons. The
MN1-MN4 ventral cell bodies were present in all of the preparations,
but they are shown only in inset in I.
A-C, The larval dendrites (A)
(see Fig. 1F) begin to undergo retraction within
2 hr of pupariation (B, C). The
encircled area indicates the contralateral dendrites
that are almost completely retracted by 4 hr APF. D-G,
IDa and IDp neurons disappear sequentially within the next 2 hr (4-6
hr APF). F, G, At the same time, two
pairs of closely associated dorsal cells become apparent (open
arrows in F, G). These pairs of
neuronal cell bodies (MN5 and X) become separated by 16 hr APF
(H). I, By 20 hr APF, only
one contralateral cell (MN5) appears in backfills in the dorsal region
of the CNS. At the same time, the MN1-MN5 dendrites begin to expand.
J-L, Dendrite sprouting and growth continues during the
next stages. The dendritic pattern becomes adult-like by 75 hr APF
(compare with Fig. 1B). Arrows in
H-J indicate a sensory branch that was stained
accidentally. Note that the MN5 cell body increases considerably in
size (see also Fig. 6).
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Before the IDp motoneuron disappeared from retrograde fills, two pairs
of neurons became apparent in ipsilateral and contralateral positions,
respectively, on the dorsal surface of the mesothoracic neuromere (Fig.
2F,G). The same two pairs of cells
were stained in fills of the left or right ISN branch. The
contralateral pair was always more heavily labeled than the ipsilateral
pair. All retrograde fills described above were performed with 3 kDa
rhodamine-dextran, which is small enough to cross gap junctions. Using
dyes of different molecular weights, we demonstrated that this staining
pattern was the result of dye coupling among the four neurons. When 10 kDa rhodamine-dextran, which does not cross gap junctions (Phelan et
al., 1996 ), was used in combination with biocytin, the dyes colocalized
only in a single neuron, the larger contralateral one, suggesting that
only this neuron innervates the DLM templates on the side of the fill
(Fig.
3A,B).
This neuron was identified as MN5, with further evidence provided
below.

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Figure 3.
MN5 and X neuron are dye coupled in the prepupa
and early pupa. A, B, Projections of
confocal optical sections of an 8 hr APF Canton-S preparation show the
dorsal region. The distalmost branch of the left ISN was filled with a
mixture of 10 kDa rhodamine-dextran and biocytin. The image in
A shows only the rhodamine fluorescence, and
B shows the biocytin revealed with Cy5-conjugated
Streptavidin. Although biocytin diffused into both pairs of MN5 and X
neurons (B, arrows), only the
contralateral (right) MN5 was labeled with 10 kDa rhodamine-dextran
(A). This indicates that the ipsilateral pair of
neurons and the contralateral X neuron are dye coupled to the
contralateral MN5. Inset in A shows the
same population at lower magnification. Note that the ventral cell
bodies of MN1-MN4 are stained along with MN5 by the 10 kDa
rhodamine-dextran. Inset in B is a
single confocal optical section, showing the distinct cell bodies of
the contralateral MN5 and X neuron, which are difficult to distinguish
in the merged image above.
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By 16 hr APF, the two cell bodies of each neuronal pair were clearly
separated from each other, but all four were still dye coupled (Fig.
2H). By 18 hr APF, only one contralateral-dorsal neuron was present in fills of the same nerve branch, together with the
four ipsilateral-ventral motoneurons and the VUM neuron. The position
and the number of neurons did not change during the remaining pupal
stages, suggesting that the four ventral-ipsilateral larval neurons
are MN1-MN4 and that the contralateral-dorsal neuron is MN5. The
inability to reveal the putative MN5 with retrograde staining from
distal sites before 4-5 hr APF suggests that its axon first reaches
the DLM template at this stage. The other contralateral neuron, which
is indirectly labeled by retrograde filling of the distal nerve between
4-5 and 18 hr APF, will be called X. The MN5 and X neurons are
considered in detail in the next section below.
The retracted motoneuron dendritic arbors began to reexpand by 19-20
hr APF (Fig. 2I). The first phase of dendritic growth (19-25 hr APF) was highlighted by the presence of numerous fine processes, mainly in the ipsilateral mesothoracic neuromere (Fig. 2I,J). By 50 hr APF,
numerous dendrites had grown perpendicular to their primary neurite.
Some of the anterior branches had bent and crossed the CNS midline
(Fig. 2K). By 75 hr APF, the dendritic pattern had
most of its adult features (Fig. 2L), but the growth of very high-order branches continued until adult emergence, which typically occurred at ~100 hr.
The developmental history of MN5
The preceding experiments brought into question the origin of MN5.
The larval MN5 may innervate a muscle that does not belong to the
dorsal group. This would explain why MN5 was not stained in retrograde
fills of the distalmost branch of the larval ISN. To examine whether
MN5 innervates targets different from the larval dorsal muscles, every
individual subbranch or group of branches of the larval T2 nerve was
filled. Two cell bodies belonging to the ventral longitudinal muscle
motoneurons (VLmns) were located contralaterally, close to the midline.
No other neurons with contralateral cell bodies were revealed (data not
shown). However, when the entire larval T2 nerve was filled from a very
proximal location just outside the CNS, a pair of cells, reminiscent of
the MN5 and X neurons, were faintly labeled, in addition to the heavily labeled IDa, IDp, and VLmns (Fig.
4A). These neurons had
not been stained in more distal fills from individual branches of the
larval T2 nerve, suggesting either that their axons stop in the main T2
nerve or that they are dye coupled to other mesothoracic neuron(s) that
have an axon in the proximal nerve.

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Figure 4.
Mesothoracic motoneurons are embryonic in origin.
All panels are projections of confocal optical sections
(z = 0.5 µm) from Canton-S animals.
A, Dorsal region of the thoracic neuromeres of a
wandering third instar larva that had fed throughout its life on
culture medium with BrdU. The entire mesothoracic nerve on the
left was filled with biocytin, and the staining was
revealed with Cy5-conjugated Streptavidin
(green). The BrdU, which was incorporated by the
nuclei of cells undergoing DNA synthesis during larval life, was
revealed with a monoclonal antibody conjugated to Cy3
(red). The biocytin-filled mesothoracic neurons did not
incorporate BrdU, suggesting that they have an embryonic origin. Note
the presence of MN5 and X neurons lightly stained with biocytin
bilaterally. Asterisk indicates the mesothoracic leg
imaginal disc, whose nuclei had incorporated BrdU. B,
Dorsal region of the larval CNS. The mesothoracic nerve on the
left was filled with 3 kDa rhodamine-dextran
(red) at a level proximal to the first branch point
(arrow in C). Dotted line
represents the midline. In addition to IDa, IDp, and VLmns, two pairs
of cells (MN5 and X) are apparent. Note that the ipsilateral pair
(left) is obscured by the dense dendritic arbors.
C, Body wall preparation of the mesothoracic (T2) hemisegment of a wandering third instar
larva. The mesothoracic nerve was filled anterogradely with biocytin,
and the staining was revealed with Cy3-conjugated Streptavidin
(red). The filamentous actin of the muscles was revealed
with Oregon Green-phalloidin (green).
Dotted lines indicate the approximate boundaries between
dorsal (D), lateral (L),
and ventral (V).
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By transecting at different points along the larval mesothoracic nerve,
it was determined that backfills from a location just proximal to the point at which T2 splits into the segmental nerve (SN)
and the ISN (Fig. 4C, arrow) consistently
revealed the contralateral pair of neurons and the homologous
ipsilateral pair (Fig. 4B). As in the late prepupa
and early pupa, the ipsilateral cell bodies were always less well
stained and were usually obscured by the larval dendrites of other
neurons. In contrast, only a single, contralateral cell was revealed in
backfills with 10 kDa rhodamine-dextran (data not shown), suggesting
that the other three cells were dye coupled to the fourth cell or to
other neurons with axons in the nerve.
None of the neurons that were labeled by retrograde fills of the entire
T2 nerve were derived from the neuroblast divisions that occur during
the larval instars. Females were allowed to lay eggs in food that
contained the thymidine analog BrdU. This resulted in incorporation of
BrdU by those cells that underwent DNA synthesis during the larval
stages. Biocytin fills of the entire proximal T2 nerve of wandering
third instar larvae were performed. BrdU incorporation was evident in
the progeny of neuroblasts that divided in the larva (Truman and Bate,
1988 ) but not in the biocytin-labeled neurons (Fig.
4A).
Intracellular dye injection revealed the morphology of the
putative MN5 and the X neuron in the larva. First, to reveal the two
right-hand cell bodies, the left T2 nerve was cut close to the CNS and
filled with 3 kDa rhodamine-dextran (Fig.
5A). One of the labeled cell
bodies was then impaled under visual control with a microelectrode
containing Lucifer yellow (see Materials and Methods) (Fig.
5A). Within 20-45 sec of the onset of intracellular injection, the dye had diffused into the other three cell bodies (Fig.
5B), suggesting the presence of gap junctions among the four
neurons. The four cell bodies were associated with only two axons
running in close apposition; only one member of the pair on each side
had an efferent axon in the larva. These neurons lacked dendritic
arbors (Fig. 5C). Conspicuous swellings were observed in the
axons (Fig. 5C, arrowhead), which may indicate contact points between the two axons.

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Figure 5.
MN5 is a developmentally arrested neuron in the
wandering larva and prepupa. All panels, except
A, are projections of confocal optical sections
(z = 0.5 µm) from Canton-S animals.
A, Fluorescent image taken from a live larval
preparation in saline showing the right pair of MN5 and X neuron that
were stained with 3 kDa rhodamine-dextran after filling the left
mesothoracic nerve. B, Confocal image of (Figure legend continued.) the same preparation
showing dorsal cell bodies and dendrites of the neurons stained after
filling the left mesothoracic nerve with 3 kDa rhodamine-dextran
(red) and the pattern of staining after intracellular
injection of Lucifer yellow (green) into the
superficial neuron in A (see electrode diagram in
A). The dye had diffused within a few seconds to the
right X neuron and the left pair of MN5 and X neuron, demonstrating
their coupling. C, Higher magnification of the area
indicated in the box in B. Only two axons
can be distinguished (arrows). Note the swelling that
may serve as contact points between MN5 and X neurons
(arrowhead) (see Results). D,
Wandering third instar larva. As in C, the right MN5 and
X neurons were stained with 3 kDa rhodamine-dextran after filling the
left mesothoracic nerve. The two pairs of MN5 and X neurons were
stained with Lucifer yellow after intracellular injection of the dye
into the right MN5 (electrode 1). The left MN5 was then impaled and
stained intracellularly with Lucifer yellow for 45 min (electrode 2),
allowing the dye to diffuse into its entire intact axon.
E, The same preparation as in D, in a
different orientation to better reveal the left MN5 axon in the right
T2 nerve. The axon of the left MN5 exits the CNS and stops in the T2
nerve at a level close to the mesothoracic leg imaginal disc
(lid) just before the nerve branches into ISN and SN.
F, Higher magnification of the boxed
areas in D and E.
G, Prepupa, 4 hr APF. The left T2 nerve was filled with
3 kDa rhodamine-dextran (red) to reveal the two pairs
of MN5 and X neuron. The left MN5 was injected intracellularly with
Lucifer yellow (green) for 45 min, revealing the
course of its intact axon (arrows) in the right
mesothoracic hemisegment along the ventral
(V) and lateral (L)
body wall. The axon had almost reached the dorsal
(D) thoracic body wall region. H,
I, Higher-magnification images of the boxed
areas indicated in G. Note the peripheral
processes of VUM neurons that were stained with 3 kDa
rhodamine-dextran attributable to the retrograde nerve fill
(arrowheads). J, Prepupa, 8 hr APF. The
nature of the coupling among the four cells (MN5 and X) had changed. In
contrast to the larva, 1 hr of Lucifer yellow injection into the MN5
(arrow) was required to stain the other three cells in
the prepupa. K, Pupa, 16 hr APF. The right MN5 and X
neuron were labeled after backfilling the left T2 nerve with 3 kDa
rhodamine-dextran. Both cells were then stained intracellularly with
Lucifer yellow. Note that the axon of the X neuron bifurcates into two
branches (encircled area). Inset shows
the encircled area in K at a higher
magnification. In contrast to the axon of MN5, the axon of X neuron
stops at the base of the T2 nerve (arrow) after giving
rise to an anterior branch (asterisk).
|
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An additional step confirmed that the larval axon of the putative MN5
is very short, terminates without innervating a muscle, and does not
project to a branch of the T2 nerve that was missed in our retrograde
fills. After filling the left T2 nerve with 3 kDa rhodamine-dextran,
the larger of the two right-hand cell bodies was injected with Lucifer
yellow. The two left-hand cell bodies were stained as a consequence of
dye transfer, and the larger of the two was then impaled under visual
control. Intracellular injection with Lucifer yellow for 30-45 min
allowed the dye to fill its intact axon entirely (Fig.
5D,E). This experimental approach confirmed unambiguously that the larval MN5 axon stops within the T2
nerve just before its first branching point (Fig.
5F). In other words, in the mature larva, MN5 is
present but incompletely differentiated. It has no dendrites and a
short axon that does not innervate a muscle.
The retrograde labeling experiments confirmed that MN5 first reaches
the DLM template fibers between 4 and 5 hr APF (Fig. 2F). Its axon must, therefore, extend toward the
dorsal region of the mesothoracic segment during the interval between
wandering third larval instar and 6 hr APF. Indeed, prolonged
intracellular injection of Lucifer yellow into the left MN5 during the
4-6 hr APF interval confirmed that its axon had almost reached the
dorsal region of the right mesothoracic hemisegment (Fig.
5G-I).
In the same preparation, the left X neuron was also stained as a result
of dye coupling (Fig. 5G), but its axon did not exit the CNS. In contrast to the larval stage, in prepupal and early pupal
preparations (2-18 hr APF), Lucifer yellow diffusion to the
contralateral pair of MN5 and X cell bodies became evident only after 1 hr of intracellular dye injection to the ipsilateral MN5, suggesting
that the degree of coupling between the two pairs of neurons had
decreased (Fig. 5J). To examine the course of the X
axon, we took advantage of the fact that the MN5 and X cell bodies
become separated at 16-18 hr APF, just before their dye coupling is
abolished (Fig. 2H). Intracellular injection of
Lucifer yellow into both neurons revealed that the axon of X neuron
reached the contralateral side of the neuromere by traveling in close apposition to the MN5 axon and then bifurcated to send one branch anteriorly (Fig. 5K, inset), with the other
branch continuing parallel to the MN5 axon. This branch stopped at the
base of the T2 nerve, in contrast to the MN5 axon, which continued in
the T2 nerve (Fig. 5K, arrow).
In summary, MN5 has an embryonic origin, but its axon terminates
proximally within the T2 nerve without innervating larval muscles. It
is a developmentally arrested neuron. In the prepupa, the MN5 axon
projects into the ISN to innervate the DLM templates. MN5 is coupled to
the X neuron, and both are coupled to their contralateral counterparts
in the mature larva, prepupa, and early pupa. The axon of the X neuron
is restricted to the CNS at these stages.
Dendritic growth of MN5
Intracellular Lucifer yellow or Neurobiotin injections revealed
the dendritic growth of MN5 at high resolution. Before impalement, MN5
was identified in dextran backfills of the T2 nerve, as detailed above,
or visualized in transmitted light based on the unique position and
size of the cell body. In P103.3/UAS-GFP animals, the
GAL4 driver directs GFP reporter gene expression in MN5
after 35 hr APF, allowing the intracellular injection of Neurobiotin under visual control.
MN5 lacks dendrites in larval, prepupal, and early pupal stages. The
first primary dendrite becomes apparent by 19 hr APF (Fig.
6A, arrow).
By 20-22 hr APF, more primary dendrites associated with a halo of very
fine processes become apparent (Fig. 6B). Within the
next 5 hr, additional primary branches are added (Fig. 6C).
During the next 15 hr (25-40 hr APF), the primary dendrites become
longer, and finer secondary processes begin to extend from the primary
branches (Fig. 6D), whereas by 40 hr APF, an anterior branch has turned and crossed the midline (Fig. 6E,
arrow). A second anterior branch and several posterior
branches cross the midline during the next 10 hr (Fig.
6F,G). By 75 hr APF, MN5 has acquired most of the features of the adult-like dendritic pattern (Fig.
6H). During the remaining stages of pupal
development, dendrites undergo a significant shift in position as the
CNS acquires its final shape. Elongation and sprouting of high-order
dendritic branches continues until the adult stage (Fig.
6I). In conclusion, primary dendrites emerge from
specific points of the neurite shaft and grow mostly perpendicular to
the neurite shaft covering a large percentage of the mesothoracic
neuromere. Their number and pattern of growth are stereotypic among
preparations of the same pupal stage. The cell body of MN5 grows
considerably larger between 20 and 30 hr APF (Fig.
7), and its position relative to the axon changes from posterior to anterior (Fig. 6B-D).

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Figure 6.
De novo dendritic
outgrowth of MN5. Projections of confocal optical sections
(z = 0.5 µm) of MN5 dendrites taken from
representative preparations of sequential stages between the early pupa
(19 hr APF) and the adult. Insets are confocal images of
the same preparations at a lower magnification to include the cell
bodies. In A and B, the cell body of MN5
was identified by backfilling its axon in Canton-S animals with 3 kDa
rhodamine-dextran (red). Subsequently, MN5 was
intracellularly injected with Lucifer yellow
(green). In C and
D, the MN5 cell body of Canton-S animals was visually
identified using DIC optics. In E-I, GFP expression in
MN5 of P103.3/UAS-GFP animals facilitated its
identification. MN5 was intracellularly injected with Neurobiotin, and
the staining was revealed with Cy3-conjugated Streptavidin. Anterior is
to the top. Dotted lines indicate
midline.
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Figure 7.
MN5 cell body increases in size during
metamorphosis. The cell bodies of intracellularly stained MN5, whose
dendrites are shown in Figure 5. Note the dramatic increase in size of
the MN5 cell body.
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 |
DISCUSSION |
Origin and metamorphic fate of MN1-MN5 and X neurons
The conversion from the larval to the adult CNS involves the
degeneration of obsolete larval neurons, the differentiation of new
neurons produced by neuroblasts during larval and pupal stages, and the
remodeling of persistent larval neurons (for review, see Levine and
Weeks, 1990 ; Weeks and Levine, 1990 ; Truman et al., 1993 ; Levine et
al., 1995 ; Consoulas et al., 2000 ; Tissot and Stocker, 2000 ).
Persistent motoneurons undergo profound changes in dendritic morphology
and synaptic interactions during metamorphosis, reflecting behavioral
requirements of the adult. In moths, adult motoneurons, including the
homologous MN1-MN5 neurons of Manduca (Casaday and Camhi,
1976 ; Duch and Levine, 2000 ; Duch et al., 2000 ) and silk moth
Bombyx mori (Tsujimura, 1988 , 1989 ), are derived from larval
motoneurons that have survived metamorphosis. It has been assumed that
the adult Drosophila MN1-MN5 are persistent, remodeled
larval motoneurons (Hummon and Costello, 1987 ; Fernandes and
Vijayraghavan, 1993 ; Truman et al., 1993 , 1994 ; Fernandes and
Keshishian, 1998 ; Tissot and Stocker, 2000 ), but definitive evidence
has been lacking until this study.
Like some Kenyon cells of the mushroom bodies (Technau and Heisenberg,
1982 ; Lee et al., 1999 ) and some pharyngeal muscle motoneurons in
Drosophila (Tissot et al., 1998 ), MN1-MN4 are born embryonically and persist, undergoing metamorphic remodeling (for a
summary of the events, see Fig. 8). MN5
represents a novel class of motoneurons that are developmentally
arrested in the larva but finish differentiating and become functional
during metamorphosis (Fig. 8). The Drosophila
tergotrochanteral motoneuron (TTMn) (Jacobs et al., 2000 ) and leg
motoneurons [C. M. Bate, unpublished data (cited in Truman et al.,
1993 ); C. Consoulas, unpublished observations] (Truman et al., 1993 )
may have similar metamorphic histories.

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Figure 8.
Summary of events underlying central and
peripheral changes of MN1-MN5 during metamorphosis. Dendritic and
axonal changes of MN1-MN5 are not synchronized. Question
marks indicate that the onset of growth of MN5 axon, as well as
the cessation of axonal growth of MN1-MN5 over the DLMs, remain to be
determined. WL3, Wandering third instar larva.
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|
These data provide insight into the development of a neural circuit. In
adult flies, a stereotyped escape response, consisting of a jump and
initiation of flight, is mediated by the giant fiber (GF) system
(Thomas and Wyman, 1983 ). This is the best described circuit in
Drosophila and readily amenable to genetic and
electrophysiological approaches (Tanouye and Wyman, 1980 ; Thomas and
Wyman, 1983 ; Trimarchi and Schneiderman, 1994b ; Phelan et al., 1996 ;
Trimarchi and Murphey, 1997 ; Allen et al., 1999 , 2000 ; Jacobs et al.,
2000 ). A pair of brain interneurons (GFs), which receive inputs from
the eyes and wind-sensitive hairs, project their axons to the
mesothoracic neuromere. The GF neurons synapse directly with the TTMn
and indirectly via the peripherally synapsing interneuron (PSI) in the
PDMN, with MN1-MN5 (Power, 1948 ; King and Wyman, 1980 ; Tanouye and
Wyman, 1980 ; Koto et al., 1981 ; Thomas and Wyman, 1983 ; Sun and Wyman, 1997 ).
The GF neurons are born during embryogenesis but delay axogenesis and
dendritic development until the end of the larval life (Allen et al.,
1998 ). In the middle of the pupal stage (later than 28 hr APF), the PSI
is dye coupled to the TTMn and to the GF (Phelan et al., 1996 ; Jacobs
et al., 2000 ). Based on the size and position of the cell body and the
course of its primary neurite (see below), we propose that the X
interneuron is the PSI. Thus, it is likely that all of the neurons in
this escape circuit are born in the embryo but differentiate for their
adult function during the metamorphic transition.
The PSI neurite must travel through the mesothoracic neuromere, cross
the midline, enter the PDMN, and stop at a specific point within the
PDMN. The PSI neurite becomes encircled by the MN1-MN5 axons with
which it makes synaptic contacts (Egger et al., 1997 ). PSI
may use MN5 as a pathfinding guide to reach the appropriate locale in
the contralateral PDMN. In support of this hypothesis, MN5 and X
neurites follow the same trajectory within the CNS at 16 hr APF. The X
neuron is transiently coupled to its contralateral counterpart and to
both MN5s in the early phase of metamorphosis (wandering larva to 16 hr
APF). In the wandering larva, the contact point between the X and MN5
neurites is close to their cell bodies. By 16 hr APF, the tip of the X
neurite contacts the MN5 axon at a point close to the exit of the
mesothoracic nerve. We hypothesize that, during the remaining time of
pupal development, the X-MN5 contact point advances into the PDMN.
Evidence in favor of this model comes from
temperature-sensitive shibire (shi) mutants, in
which a heat pulse at 12 hr APF results in developmental arrest of PSI
neurite extension. The PSI neurite never reaches its normal position in
the PDMN but can be found in the adult mutant flies within the CNS just
before the exit of the nerve (Hummon and Costello, 1987 ), which is
where we find the X neuron axon in early pupae.
Time course of dendritic and axonal remodeling
Although both the dendrites and axon terminals of the flight
motoneurons are modified during metamorphosis, the central and peripheral remodeling of MN1-MN5 in Drosophila are not
synchronized (Fig. 8). Motoneurons MN1-MN4, IDa, and IDp, undergo
dendritic regression very rapidly during an ~2-hr interval in the
early prepupa (2-4 hr APF), followed by a phase of stability (4-19 hr APF). In the periphery, the prepupal DLM template muscles enter a phase
of partial degeneration (6-10 hr APF) (Fernandes et al., 1991 ), and
their associated MN1-MN4 motor branches begin to retract (Fernandes
and Vijayraghavan, 1993 ). Thus, dendritic regression (2-4 hr APF)
precedes the retraction of the axon terminals of MN1-MN4 from the DLM
template fibers (6-10 hr APF) (Fig. 8). Dendritic outgrowth begins
simultaneously for MN1-MN4 and MN5 at 19-20 hr APF, whereas the
reexpansion of their motor branches over the developing DLMs begins
earlier, by 10 hr APF (Fernandes and Vijayraghavan, 1993 ) (Fig. 8).
Regulation of dendritic growth
The primary dendrites of MN5 extend perpendicularly from specific
regions of the neurite in anterior or posterior directions. As the
primary branches grow in length, secondary branches begin to form from
their tips and shafts. Lengthening of all primary branches, addition of
high-order branches, and bending of some anterior and posterior
branches across the midline toward the cell body shape the final
pattern of the dendritic arbor of the MN5. Thus, the formation
of MN5 dendritic tree occurs in discrete but often overlapping steps.
The mechanisms controlling each of these processes may now be examined
against this detailed description of normal growth.
Insect steroid hormones, the ecdysteroids, are major regulators of
dendritic remodeling. Manipulations of the ecdysteroid titer
demonstrate that both dendritic regression and regrowth of persistent
Manduca motoneurons are under hormonal control (Weeks and
Truman, 1985 ; Weeks, 1987 ; Truman and Reiss, 1988 ; Weeks and Ernst-Utzschneider, 1989 ; Levine and Weeks, 1990 , 1996 ; Weeks et al.,
1992 ; Streichert and Weeks, 1995 ). Ecdysteroids act directly on neurons
to regulate growth and branching in primary cell culture (Prugh et al.,
1992 ; Levine and Weeks, 1996 ; Kraft et al., 1998 ) through regulation of
the growth cone cytoskeleton (Matheson and Levine, 1999 ). Among the
genes directly induced by 20E (primary response genes) is a set of loci
encoding transcription factors (Andres and Thummel, 1992 ), at least one
of which, Broad Complex (BRC), is required for
metamorphic reorganization of the CNS (Restifo and White, 1991 ; Liu and
Restifo, 1997 ). One of the transcription factors encoded by
BRC is essential for dendritic outgrowth of MN1-MN5 during
pupal development (our unpublished observations).
In addition to steroid hormones, other extracellular signals
(Tessier-Lavigne and Goodman, 1996 ; Scott and Luo, 2001 ), synaptic partners, spontaneous and synaptic activity (Cline, 2001 ), and intrinsic genetic programs (Gao et al., 1999 ) regulate dendritic growth
and guidance. A basic understanding of normal neural function and of
how neurons respond to behavioral changes, injury, and disease requires
knowledge of both the mechanisms that allow neurons to maintain stable
dendritic structures and the signals and transduction pathways that
lead to modifications. Linking intrinsic regulators with extrinsic
signals and neural activity is a significant challenge (McAllister,
2000 ; Redmond and Ghosh, 2001 ). One approach to this challenge is to
develop model systems in which regulatory molecules can be manipulated
and the consequences assessed by examining the dendritic morphology of
identified neurons. MN5 offers a central neuron whose dendritic growth
regulation can be analyzed at high resolution through mutation or
directed alterations in gene expression.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Oct. 9, 2001; revised Feb. 1, 2002; accepted Feb. 11, 2002.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant NS28495.
We thank Dr. C. Duch for comments on this manuscript, C. Michel for
preparing fly food, and Dr. R. Kraft for valuable advice on fly
genetics throughout the course of this study. We also thank Drs. R. Murphey and K. Ito for fly stocks.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Christos Consoulas at his
present address: National University of Athens, Medical School,
Laboratory of Experimental Physiology, Micras Asias 75, 11527 Athens, Greece. E-mail: cconsoul{at}med.uoa.gr.
 |
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