Haig Keshishian’s research while affiliated with Yale University and other places

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Publications (74)


Fig. 2 Ena is epistatic to Lar, Sdc, and Abl in NMJ growth. Gain of function (GOF) of the RPTP, Dlar (a), and associated HSPG ligand, Sdc (b), fail to rescue the bouton loss phenotype of UAS-FP 4 mito (ena LOF ) flies when combined (DBL). Loss of the putative Ena suppressor Abl in Abl 2 /Df stE34 increases bouton number (c), supporting the antagonistic interaction of Ena and Abl. Full suppression of the Abl 2 /Df stE34 phenotype is observed in UAS-FP 4 mito (ena LOF ) flies (c). Partial suppression of the Abl 4 /Df stE34 phenotype is observed with haplosufficient enaGC5/+ flies (d) indicating Ena is both downstream of and antagonized by Abl. Bouton number was determined by quantifying 1b and 1 s boutons. All results shown are statistically significant relative to control, with P < 0.05, as determined by Welch's t-test. Error bars indicate ± s.e.m. of genotype; gray shading indicates ± s.e.m. of control; n ≥ 20 NMJs for all genotypes
Presynaptic Ena expression is required to promote neuromuscular junction development. Fluorescence images (a-b) and quantification (c-d) of NMJs from muscle 6/7 in segment A2 of third-instar wandering larvae. Flies expressing UAS-AP4mito (control; A-A") and UAS-FP4mito (enaLOF; B-B") under the control of the neuronal 1407-GAL4 driver are shown stained with horseradish peroxidase (HRP; green, top panels), Futsch (red, middle panels), and with the HRP/Futsch channels merged (yellow, bottom panels). C, Quantification of synaptic 1b and 1 s bouton number in neuronal enaLOF lines demonstrate a statistically significant decrease relative to control. Expression of UAS-Ena(+) under the control of 1407-GAL4 rescues the loss of bouton number in enaLOF animals (c). D, Branch number is also significantly decreased enaLOF. * P < 0.05, as determined by Welch’s t-test; error bars indicate ± s.e.m. of genotype; gray shading indicates ± s.e.m. of control; n ≥ 20 NMJs for all genotypes, scale = 20 μm
Synaptic Abl overgrowth phenotype is epistatic to Dlar and Sdc and requires the catalytic activity of Abl in the pre-synaptic compartment. Third-instar LOF mutants of Dlar (a) and Sdc (b), exhibit decreased bouton number in muscle 6/7 NMJs compared to Canton-S wild-type controls. The phenotypes of Lar and Sdc LOF mutants were suppressed by AblLOF (a-b), indicating that Abl is downstream of the Dlar pathway. Expression of UAS-Abl(+) under the control of the neuronal 1407-GAL4 driver rescued the bouton gain phenotype observed in AblLOF animals to levels observed in Canton-S flies (c). This indicates that pre-synaptic Abl is necessary and sufficient in synapse morphogenesis. Expression of kinase-dead Abl (UAS-Abl(K-N)) pre-synaptically failed to rescue AblLOF phenotypes (c), further supporting the requirement for Abl catalytic activity in synaptogenesis. D, Schematic of the Dlar signaling pathway. Bouton number was determined by quantifying 1b and 1 s boutons. * P < 0.05, n.s. indicates not significant, as determined by Welch’s t-test; error bars indicate ± s.e.m. of genotype; gray shading indicates ± s.e.m. of control; n ≥ 20 NMJs for all genotypes
Presynaptic Ena regulates active zone structure. Electron micrographs of type 1b synaptic boutons at the 6/7 NMJ from flies expressing UAS-AP4mito (control, a) and UAS-FP4mito (enaLOF, b) under the control of the neuronal 1407-GAL4 driver were obtained to analyze gross, qualitative ultrastructure (a,b) and to quantify active zone area (c,d). Qualitative comparison revealed no catastrophic differences in SSR (pink shading) or bouton (yellow shading) morphology and/or size in enaLOF (b) compared to controls (a). To determine quantitative phenotypes, mean active zone area was calculated by adding length of the electron dense region multiplied by the thickness of the serial sections (100 nm) for all sections spanning the active zone (c). D, Mean active zone area is significantly increased in enaLOF. M indicates mitochondria; ** P < 0.01, as determined by Welch’s t-test; error bars indicate ± s.e.m. of genotype; gray shading indicates ± s.e.m. of control; n = 3 animals for all genotypes; scale bar = 500 nm
Presynaptic Ena function regulates spontaneous but not evoked glutamate release. a, Current clamp recordings from muscle 6 (abdominal segments 3 and 4) revealed similar EJP amplitude and kinetics between the AP4mito control and FP4mito under the control of the neuronal 1407-GAL4 driver (top), yet very distinct spontaneous mEJPs (bottom). The mean EJP amplitude was not altered by enaLOF (b), whereas mEJP frequency (c) and amplitude (d) were both significantly increased. D’, An distribution of mEJP amplitude (an alternate depiction of data in d) shows a shift to the right in enaLOF animals with abnormally high mEJPs (indicated by five-pointed star), and the mean mEJP amplitude was significantly increased (indicated by filled arrows). Results corresponding to control are depicted with a black arrow and blue distribution; results corresponding to enaLOF are depicted with a gray arrow and orange distribution). * P < 0.05, as determined by Welch’s t-test, n = 3 animals and 6 NMJs for control, n = 4 animals and 7 NMJs for enaLOF

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Drosophila enabled promotes synapse morphogenesis and regulates active zone form and function
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March 2020

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178 Reads

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4 Citations

Neural Development

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Cheryl Thompson

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Background: Recent studies of synapse form and function highlight the importance of the actin cytoskeleton in regulating multiple aspects of morphogenesis, neurotransmission, and neural plasticity. The conserved actin-associated protein Enabled (Ena) is known to regulate development of the Drosophila larval neuromuscular junction through a postsynaptic mechanism. However, the functions and regulation of Ena within the presynaptic terminal has not been determined. Methods: Here, we use a conditional genetic approach to address a presynaptic role for Ena on presynaptic morphology and ultrastructure, and also examine the pathway in which Ena functions through epistasis experiments. Results: We find that Ena is required to promote the morphogenesis of presynaptic boutons and branches, in contrast to its inhibitory role in muscle. Moreover, while postsynaptic Ena is regulated by microRNA-mediated mechanisms, presynaptic Ena relays the output of the highly conserved receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase Dlar and associated proteins including the heparan sulfate proteoglycan Syndecan, and the non-receptor Abelson tyrosine kinase to regulate addition of presynaptic varicosities. Interestingly, Ena also influences active zones, where it restricts active zone size, regulates the recruitment of synaptic vesicles, and controls the amplitude and frequency of spontaneous glutamate release. Conclusion: We thus show that Ena, under control of the Dlar pathway, is required for presynaptic terminal morphogenesis and bouton addition and that Ena has active zone and neurotransmission phenotypes. Notably, in contrast to Dlar, Ena appears to integrate multiple pathways that regulate synapse form and function.

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Target‐Dependent Retrograde Signaling Mediates Synaptic Plasticity at the Drosophila Neuromuscular Junction

January 2020

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86 Reads

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8 Citations

Developmental Neurobiology

Neurons that innervate multiple targets often establish synapses with target‐specific strengths, and local forms of synaptic plasticity. We have examined the molecular‐genetic mechanisms that allow a single Drosophila motoneuron, the ventral Common Exciter (vCE), to establish connections with target‐specific properties at its various synaptic partners. By driving transgenes in a subset of vCE’s targets, we found that individual target cells are able to independently control the properties of VCE’s innervating branch and synapses. This is achieved by means of a trans‐synaptic growth factor secreted by the target cell. At the larval neuromuscular junction, postsynaptic glutamate receptor activity stimulates the release of the BMP4/5/6 homologue Glass bottom boat (Gbb). As larvae mature and motoneuron terminals grow, Gbb activates the R‐Smad transcriptional regulator pMad to facilitate presynaptic development. We found that manipulations affecting glutamate receptors or Gbb within subsets of target muscles led to local effects either specific to the manipulated muscle or by a limited gradient within the presynaptic branches. While presynaptic development depends on pMad transcriptional activity within the motoneuron nucleus, we find that the Gbb growth factor may also act locally within presynaptic terminals. Local Gbb signaling and presynaptic pMad accumulation within boutons may therefore participate in a “synaptic tagging” mechanism, to influence synaptic growth and plasticity in Drosophila.


In Vivo Calcium Signaling during Synaptic Refinement at the Drosophila Neuromuscular Junction

May 2017

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114 Reads

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19 Citations

The Journal of Neuroscience : The Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience

Neural activity plays a key role in pruning aberrant synapses in various neural systems, including the mammalian cortex, where low-frequency (0.01 Hz) calcium oscillations refine topographic maps. However, the activity-dependent molecular mechanisms remain incompletely understood. Activity-dependent pruning also occurs at embryonic Drosophila neuromuscular junctions (NMJs), where low-frequency Ca²⁺ oscillations are required for synaptic refinement and the response to the muscle-derived chemorepellant Sema2a. We examined embryonic growth cone filopodia in vivo to directly observe their exploration and to analyze the episodic Ca²⁺ oscillations involved in refinement. Motoneuron filopodia repeatedly contacted off-target muscle fibers over several hours during late embryogenesis, with episodic Ca²⁺ signals present in both motile filopodia as well as in later-stabilized synaptic boutons. The Ca²⁺ transients matured over several hours into regular low-frequency (0.03Hz) oscillations. In vivo imaging of intact embryos of both sexes revealed that the formation of ectopic filopodia is increased in Sema2a heterozygotes. We provide genetic evidence suggesting a complex presynaptic Ca²⁺-dependent signaling network underlying refinement that involves the phosphatases calcineurin and protein phosphatase-1, as well the serine/threonine kinases CaMKII and PKA. Significantly, this network influenced the neuron’s response to the muscle’s Sema2a chemorepellant, critical for the removal of off-target contacts.


FIGURE 2 | The molecular and cellular mechanisms involved in synaptic refinement. (A) The interactions were identified by genetic tests and transgenic manipulations. A low frequency voltage oscillation activates voltage gated Ca 2+ channels (VGCCs). The resulting Ca 2+ entry regulates Ca 2+-dependent effectors including Ca 2+ /calmodulin-dependent serine/threonine kinase II (CaMKII), Calcineurin (CaN), and Rutabaga. The latter increases cAMP levels, which in turn regulate PKA and PP1. The chemorepellant Sema2a is secreted by the muscle and activates the presynaptic PlexinB receptor. The response to Sema2a is gated by the level of presynaptic Ca 2+ activity (see text for details). Arrows and T-shape lines indicate positive and negative regulation, respectively. The subcellular physical location and region of action of the molecular components have not been determined yet. (B) A model for non-Hebbian refinement at the Drosophila NMJ. The left panel shows an initial contact made by a motoneuron onto on-target and off-target muscle fibers. The molecular match is stronger with the on-target fiber. When Ca 2+ levels are low, the response to the retrograde chemorepulsive signal from the muscle is muted, allowing the off-target contact to be retained. With neural activity and elevated presynaptic Ca 2+ (right panel), the repulsive response is elevated, leading to the withdrawal of the off-target contact. Note that the model does not depend on correlated activity between the synaptic partners, as would be expected in a Hebbian mechanism. 
Activity-Dependent Synaptic Refinement: New Insights from Drosophila

April 2017

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180 Reads

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31 Citations

Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience

During development, neurons establish inappropriate connections as they seek out their synaptic partners, resulting in supernumerary synapses that must be pruned away. The removal of miswired synapses usually involves electrical activity, often through a Hebbian spike-timing mechanism. A novel form of activity-dependent refinement is used by Drosophila that may be non-Hebbian, and is critical for generating the precise connectivity observed in that system. In Drosophila, motoneurons use both glutamate and the biogenic amine octopamine for neurotransmission, and the muscle fibers receive multiple synaptic inputs. Motoneuron growth cones respond in a time-regulated fashion to multiple chemotropic signals arising from their postsynaptic partners. Central to this mechanism is a very low frequency (<0.03 Hz) oscillation of presynaptic cytoplasmic calcium, that regulates and coordinates the action of multiple downstream effectors involved in the withdrawal from off-target contacts. Low frequency calcium oscillations are widely observed in developing neural circuits in mammals, and have been shown to be critical for normal connectivity in a variety of neural systems. In Drosophila these mechanisms allow the growth cone to sample widely among possible synaptic partners, evaluate opponent chemotropic signals, and withdraw from off-target contacts. It is possible that the underlying molecular mechanisms are conserved widely among invertebrates and vertebrates.


Cyclic Nucleotide Signaling is Required during Synaptic Refinement at the Drosophila Neuromuscular Junction: Cyclic Nucleotide Signaling during Synaptogenesis

June 2016

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66 Reads

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14 Citations

Developmental Neurobiology

The removal of miswired synapses is a fundamental prerequisite for normal circuit development, leading to clinical problems when aberrant. However, the underlying activity-dependent molecular mechanisms involved in synaptic pruning remain incompletely resolved. Here we examine the dynamic properties of intracellular calcium oscillations and test a role for cAMP signaling during synaptic refinement in intact Drosophila embryos using optogenetic tools. We provide in vivo evidence at the single gene level that the calcium-dependent adenylyl cyclase rutabaga, the phosphodiesterase dunce, the kinase PKA, and Protein Phosphatase 1 (PP1) all operate within a functional signaling pathway to modulate Sema2a-dependent chemorepulsion. We find that presynaptic cAMP levels are required to be dynamically maintained at an optimal level to suppress connectivity defects. We also propose that PP1 may serve as a molecular link between cAMP signaling and CaMKII in the pathway underlying refinement. Our results introduce an in vivo model where presynaptic cAMP levels, downstream of electrical activity and calcium influx, act via PKA and PP1 to modulate the neuron's response to chemorepulsion involved in the withdrawal of off-target synaptic contacts. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.



Mutations in KATNB1 Cause Complex Cerebral Malformations by Disrupting Asymmetrically Dividing Neural Progenitors

December 2014

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649 Reads

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97 Citations

Neuron

Exome sequencing analysis of over 2,000 children with complex malformations of cortical development identified five independent (four homozygous and one compound heterozygous) deleterious mutations in KATNB1, encoding the regulatory subunit of the microtubule-severing enzyme Katanin. Mitotic spindle formation is defective in patient-derived fibroblasts, a consequence of disrupted interactions of mutant KATNB1 with KATNA1, the catalytic subunit of Katanin, and other microtubule-associated proteins. Loss of KATNB1 orthologs in zebrafish (katnb1) and flies (kat80) results in microcephaly, recapitulating the human phenotype. In the developing Drosophila optic lobe, kat80 loss specifically affects the asymmetrically dividing neuroblasts, which display supernumerary centrosomes and spindle abnormalities during mitosis, leading to cell cycle progression delays and reduced cell numbers. Furthermore, kat80 depletion results in dendritic arborization defects in sensory and motor neurons, affecting neural architecture. Taken together, we provide insight into the mechanisms by which KATNB1 mutations cause human cerebral cortical malformations, demonstrating its fundamental role during brain development. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


A Systematic Nomenclature for the Insect Brain

February 2014

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317 Reads

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608 Citations

Neuron

Despite the importance of the insect nervous system for functional and developmental neuroscience, descriptions of insect brains have suffered from a lack of uniform nomenclature. Ambiguous definitions of brain regions and fiber bundles have contributed to the variation of names used to describe the same structure. The lack of clearly determined neuropil boundaries has made it difficult to document precise locations of neuronal projections for connectomics study. To address such issues, a consortium of neurobiologists studying arthropod brains, the Insect Brain Name Working Group, has established the present hierarchical nomenclature system, using the brain of Drosophila melanogaster as the reference framework, while taking the brains of other taxa into careful consideration for maximum consistency and expandability. The following summarizes the consortium's nomenclature system and highlights examples of existing ambiguities and remedies for them. This nomenclature is intended to serve as a standard of reference for the study of the brain of Drosophila and other insects.


Retrograde BMP Signaling at the Synapse: A Permissive Signal for Synapse Maturation and Activity-Dependent Plasticity

November 2013

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207 Reads

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91 Citations

The Journal of Neuroscience : The Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience

At the Drosophila neuromuscular junction (NMJ), the loss of retrograde, trans-synaptic BMP signaling causes motoneuron terminals to have fewer synaptic boutons, whereas increased neuronal activity results in a larger synapse with more boutons. Here, we show that an early and transient BMP signal is necessary and sufficient for NMJ growth as well as for activity-dependent synaptic plasticity. This early critical period was revealed by the temporally controlled suppression of Mad, the SMAD1 transcriptional regulator. Similar results were found by genetic rescue tests involving the BMP4/5/6 ligand Glass bottom boat (Gbb) in muscle, and alternatively the type II BMP receptor Wishful Thinking (Wit) in the motoneuron. These observations support a model where the muscle signals back to the innervating motoneuron's nucleus to activate presynaptic programs necessary for synaptic growth and activity-dependent plasticity. Molecular genetic gain- and loss-of-function studies show that genes involved in NMJ growth and plasticity, including the adenylyl cyclase Rutabaga, the Ig-CAM Fasciclin II, the transcription factor AP-1 (Fos/Jun), and the adhesion protein Neurexin, all depend critically on the canonical BMP pathway for their effects. By contrast, elevated expression of Lar, a receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase found to be necessary for activity-dependent plasticity, rescued the phenotypes associated with the loss of Mad signaling. We also find that synaptic structure and function develop using genetically separable, BMP-dependent mechanisms. Although synaptic growth depended on Lar and the early, transient BMP signal, the maturation of neurotransmitter release was independent of Lar and required later, ongoing BMP signaling.


Genetic Systems for Functional Cell Ablation in Drosophila

September 2012

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72 Reads

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5 Citations

Cold Spring Harbor Protocols

The selective removal of cells by ablation is a powerful tool in the study of eukaryotic developmental biology, providing much information about the origin, fate, or function of these cells in the developing organism. In Drosophila, three main methods have been used to ablate cells: chemical, genetic, and laser ablation. Each method has its own applicability with regard to developmental stage and the cells to be ablated, and its own limitations. This article describes genetic systems for functional cell ablation in Drosophila. Genetic ablation consists of delivering a toxin or death-inducing gene under the control of a cell-specific enhancer, or by means of the GAL4 system. Because of the wide range of existing enhancers, toxins and death genes can be targeted to virtually any cell of choice, allowing for cell-type-specificity. Genetic ablation is less expensive and less labor-intensive than laser ablation. It allows one to analyze the effects of eliminating every cell of a given type within an embryo, and also allows the examination of populations rather than individuals.


Citations (71)


... Overexpression of wild-type Rac (Rac WT ) caused a similar phenotype, albeit at lower frequency (SI Appendix, Fig. S1). This effect was perplexing because Rac activity is generally not lethal to cells, and intentionally killing border cells by expressing the pro-apoptotic gene Reaper (23) or by laser ablation (26) does not cause egg chamber death but rather permits development to stage 14. ...

Reference:

Hyperactive Rac stimulates cannibalism of living target cells and enhances CAR-M-mediated cancer cell killing
Laser ablation studies of the role of the Drosophila oocyte nucleus in pattern formation
  • Citing Article
  • October 1991

Science

... Notably, Fe65 and APP family KO mice were reported to exhibit deficits at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) followed by muscle weakness. Changes in NMJ formation in Mena TKO mice were not yet investigated, but studies of Drosophila NMJs revealed a pre-and postsynaptic abundance and function of Ena [179][180][181]. However, to gain further insights, future genetic studies will be required. ...

Drosophila enabled promotes synapse morphogenesis and regulates active zone form and function

Neural Development

... Psc and Su(z)2 knockdown in ovaries increases dpp expression, leading to tumor formation (Li et al. 2016). Retrograde TGF-β signaling mediated by dpp is necessary for acute remodeling connectivity of central pacemaker neurons (Polcowñuk et al. 2021) and larval NMJ growth and plasticity (Berke et al. 2019(Berke et al. , 2013. Therefore, Su(z)2 may modify atl function indirectly by affecting TGF-β signaling or directly affecting its expression. ...

Target‐Dependent Retrograde Signaling Mediates Synaptic Plasticity at the Drosophila Neuromuscular Junction
  • Citing Article
  • January 2020

Developmental Neurobiology

... Little is known about the role of this protein in cortical neural progenitors; however, it is expressed during mitosis and was shown to associate with the daughter centriole during interphase [105,106]. KATNB1 mutations also leads to microcephaly and lissencephaly, with null fibroblasts showing an excess of centrioles and cilia, as well as mitotic spindle defects [96]. In the Drosophila optic lobe, asymmetric division of neural progenitors was reduced with Katnb1 loss. ...

Mutations in KATNB1 Cause Complex Cerebral Malformations by Disrupting Asymmetrically Dividing Neural Progenitors

Neuron

... However, juvenile animals are often incapable of performing the full repertoire of smooth rhythmic locomotion that they will eventually develop [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8] . Organized locomotion is subject to developmental regulation, as animals undergo various anatomical changes, requiring a maturing nervous system to continuously accommodate a growing body [9][10][11][12][13] . For instance, early development during the prenatal period in humans lays down the primary structure of the brain but neural networks undergo further refinement to stabilize, adapt, and reshape their control of a growing body to produce structured rhythmic behavior [14][15][16] . ...

Cellular mechanisms governing synaptic development in Drosophila melanogaster
  • Citing Article
  • August 1993

Journal of Neurobiology

... CaNA14-F and Pp2B-14D share 82% protein sequence identity and share approximately 62% identity with CaNA1, while CaNB and CaNB2 share 98% similarity in protein sequence (Tomita et al., 2011). Presynaptic knockdown of CaNB leads to an increased frequency of ectopic neuromuscular contacts, and CaNB knockouts have been shown to have significantly reduced sleep Vonhoff and Keshishian, 2017). Knockdown of CaNB reduces calcineurin activity, similar to sra overexpression (Shaw and Chang, 2013;Lee et al., 2016). ...

In Vivo Calcium Signaling during Synaptic Refinement at the Drosophila Neuromuscular Junction

The Journal of Neuroscience : The Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience

... The genes have all been described as candidate genes in neuropsychiatric diseases. Lower expression would agree with activity dependent synaptic refinement [61][62][63]. Because ELP was shown to activate the immune system, we searched for all genes with Gene Ontology terms of "immune" or "inflammatory" and subsequently filtered for P-values < 0.1 and Log2 difference < − 0.2 or > 0.2. ...

Activity-Dependent Synaptic Refinement: New Insights from Drosophila

Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience

... PA has been reported to bind directly to PDE4A and PDE4D in mammalian cells (21,22). Dnc/PDE4 catalyzes the hydrolysis of cAMP into GMP and AMP, and thus functions as a negative regulator of the core cAMP/ PKA signaling pathway, which has been well established as a reg ulator of neuronal excitation, neural plasticity, and learning/mem ory via studies in Drosophila and other systems (23)(24)(25)(26). Two additional members of the cAMP/PKA pathway, Protein kinase, cAMP-dependent, regulatory subunit type 2 (PKA-R2, human ort holog: PRKAR2A) and Exchange protein directly activated by cAMP (EPAC, human ortholog: RAPGEF4) are also present in our list of TDP-43/FUS modifiers but were not previously reported to be PA interactors (Fig. 1A). ...

Cyclic Nucleotide Signaling is Required during Synaptic Refinement at the Drosophila Neuromuscular Junction: Cyclic Nucleotide Signaling during Synaptogenesis
  • Citing Article
  • June 2016

Developmental Neurobiology

... In the case of the dnl1 mutants, this reduction in bouton number results from a failure of the NMJ to expand during development since embryonic NMJs were not significantly different [34]. In wild-type animals, the number of synaptic boutons in larval NMJs increases in an activity dependent manner throughout larval develop- ment717273. The reduced NMJ expansion in dnl1 mutants is consistent with a role for neuroligin in synapse maturation. ...

CELLULAR MECHANISMS GOVERNING SYNAPTIC DEVELOPMENT IN DROSOPHILA EMBRYOS
  • Citing Article
  • June 1994

Developmental Biology

... However, juvenile animals are often incapable of performing the full repertoire of smooth rhythmic locomotion that they will eventually develop [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8]. Organized locomotion is subject to developmental regulation, as animals undergo various anatomical changes, requiring a maturing nervous system to continuously accommodate a growing body [9][10][11][12][13]. For instance, early development during the prenatal period in humans lays down the primary structure of the brain but neural networks undergo further refinement to stabilize, adapt, and reshape their control of a growing body to produce structured rhythmic behavior [14][15][16]. ...

Erratum: Cellular mechanisms governing synaptic development in Drosophila melanogaster (Journal of Neurobiology (June 1993) 24:6 (771, 778 and 781))
  • Citing Article
  • January 1993