Project description:At the core of the changes characteristic of alcoholism are alterations in gene expression in the brain of the addicted individual. These changes are believed to underlie some of the neuroadaptations that promote compulsive drinking. Unfortunately, the mechanisms by which alcohol consumption produces changes in gene expression remain poorly understood. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have emerged as important regulators of gene expression because they can coordinately modulate the translation efficiency of large sets of specific mRNAs. Here, we investigate the early miRNA responses elicited by an acute sedating dose of alcohol in the Drosophila model organism. In our analysis, we combine the power of next-generation sequencing with Drosophila genetics to identify alcohol-sensitive miRNAs and to functionally test them for a role in modulating alcohol sensitivity. We identified 14 known Drosophila miRNAs, and 13 putative novel miRNAs that respond to an acute sedative exposure to alcohol. Using the GeneSwitch Gal4/UAS system, a subset of these ethanol-responsive miRNAs was functionally tested to determine their individual contribution in modulating ethanol sensitivity. We identified two microRNAs that when overexpressed significantly increased ethanol sensitivity: miR-6 and miR-310. MicroRNA target prediction analysis revealed that the different alcohol-responsive miRNAs target-overlapping sets of mRNAs. Alcoholism is the product of accumulated cellular changes produced by chronic ethanol consumption. Although all of the changes described herein are extremely rapid responses evoked by a single ethanol exposure, understanding the gene expression changes that occur in the first few minutes after ethanol exposure will help us to categorize ethanol responses into those that are near instantaneous and those that are emergent responses produced only by repeated ethanol exposure.
Project description:Adjusting behavior to changed environmental contingencies is critical for survival, and reversal learning provides an experimental handle on such cognitive flexibility. Here, we investigate reversal learning in larval Drosophila Using odor-taste associations, we establish olfactory reversal learning in the appetitive and the aversive domain, using either fructose as a reward or high-concentration sodium chloride as a punishment, respectively. Reversal learning is demonstrated both in differential and in absolute conditioning, in either valence domain. In differential conditioning, the animals are first trained such that an odor A is paired, for example, with the reward whereas odor B is not (A+/B); this is followed by a second training phase with reversed contingencies (A/B+). In absolute conditioning, odor B is omitted, such that the animals are first trained with paired presentations of A and reward, followed by unpaired training in the second training phase. Our results reveal "true" reversal learning in that the opposite associative effects of both the first and the second training phase are detectable after reversed-contingency training. In what is a surprisingly quick, one-trial contingency adjustment in the Drosophila larva, the present study establishes a simple and genetically easy accessible study case of cognitive flexibility.
Project description:In the testis, the continuous production of sperm is maintained by a small population of stem cells called germ line stem cells (GSCs) in Drosophila, or spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) in mammals. This stem cell population can self-renew or produce daughter cells that differentiate into mature sperm. In Drosophila, BMP signals inhibit GSC differentiation by blocking transcription of the gene bag of marbles (bam). Once bam is activated, germ cells initiate differentiation. We identified a novel gene in mouse, Gm114, that shows homology to Drosophila bam. In male germ cells, expression of Gm114 begins at 12.5-13.5 days post coitum (dpc), the stage in mice when germ cells cease proliferation and begin differentiation into prospermatogonia. In the adult testis, Gm114 is highly expressed in differentiated spermatocytes and spermatids but not in undifferentiated spermatogonia, strongly suggesting that, similar to Bam, GM114 plays an important role in mammalian germ line stem cell self-renewal and differentiation. Interestingly, deletion of the majority of the GM114 protein does not affect mouse viability or fertility. This suggests that either there is a function for the remaining N-terminal of GM114, or that there are alternative mechanisms in the mammalian system that control germ cell differentiation.
Project description:UDP-GalNAc:polypeptide alpha-N-acetylgalactosaminyltrans- ferases (ppGalNAc Ts) comprise a large family of glycosyltransferases that initiate mucin-type protein O-glycosylation, transferring alpha-GalNAc to Thr and Ser residues of polypeptide acceptors. Families of ppGalNAc Ts are found across diverse eukaryotes with orthologs identifiable from mammals to single-cell organisms. The peptide substrate specificity and specific protein targets of the individual ppGalNAc T family members remain poorly understood. Previously, we reported a series of oriented random peptide substrate libraries for quantitatively determining the peptide substrate specificities of the mammalian ppGalNAc T1 and T2 (Gerken TA, Raman J, Fritz TA, Jamison O. 2006. Identification of common and unique peptide substrate preferences for the UDP-GalNAc:polypeptide alpha-N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferases T1 & T2 (ppGalNAc T1 & T2) derived from oriented random peptide substrates. J Biol Chem. 281:32403-32416). With these substrates, previously unknown features of the transferases were revealed. Utilizing these and a new lengthened set of random peptides, studies have now been performed on PGANT5 and PGANT2, the Drosophila orthologs of T1 and T2. The results from these studies suggest that the major peptide substrate determinants for these transferases are contained within 2 to 3 residues flanking the site of glycosylation. It is further found that the mammalian and fly T1 orthologs display very similar peptide substrate preferences, while the T2 orthologs are nearly indistinguishable, suggesting similar peptide preferences amongst orthologous pairs have been maintained across evolution. This conclusion is further supported by sequence homology comparisons of each of the transferase orthologs, showing that the peptide substrate and UDP binding site residues are more highly conserved between species relative to their remaining catalytic and lectin domain residues.
Project description:MIG-10/RIAM/lamellipodin (MRL) proteins link activated Ras-GTPases with actin regulatory Ena/VASP proteins to induce local changes in cytoskeletal dynamics and cell motility. MRL proteins alter monomeric (G):filamentous (F) actin ratios, but the impact of these changes had not been fully appreciated. We report here that the Drosophila MRL ortholog, pico, is required for tissue and organismal growth. Reduction in pico levels resulted in reduced cell division rates, growth retardation, increased G:F actin ratios and lethality. Conversely, pico overexpression reduced G:F actin ratios and promoted tissue overgrowth in an epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor (EGFR)-dependent manner. Consistently, in HeLa cells, lamellipodin was required for EGF-induced proliferation. We show that pico and lamellipodin share the ability to activate serum response factor (SRF), a transcription factor that responds to reduced G:F-actin ratios via its co-factor Mal. Genetics data indicate that mal/SRF levels are important for pico-mediated tissue growth. We propose that MRL proteins link EGFR activation to mitogenic SRF signaling via changes in actin dynamics.
Project description:Animals form and update learned associations between otherwise neutral sensory cues and aversive outcomes (i.e., punishment) to predict and avoid danger in changing environments. When a cue later occurs without punishment, this unexpected omission of aversive outcome is encoded as reward via activation of reward-encoding dopaminergic neurons. How such activation occurs remains unknown. Using real-time in vivo functional imaging, optogenetics, behavioral analysis and synaptic reconstruction from electron microscopy data, we identify the neural circuit mechanism through which Drosophila reward-encoding dopaminergic neurons are activated when an olfactory cue is unexpectedly no longer paired with electric shock punishment. Reduced activation of punishment-encoding dopaminergic neurons relieves depression of olfactory synaptic inputs to cholinergic neurons. Synaptic excitation by these cholinergic neurons of reward-encoding dopaminergic neurons increases their odor response, thus decreasing aversiveness of the odor. These studies reveal how an excitatory cholinergic relay from punishment- to reward-encoding dopaminergic neurons encodes the absence of punishment as reward, revealing a general circuit motif for updating aversive memories that could be present in mammals.
Project description:The mammalian ortholog of the Drosophila MOF (males absent on the first) gene product is a histone H4 lysine 16-specific acetyltransferase. Recent studies have shown that depletion of human MOF (hMOF) in human cell lines leads to genomic instability, spontaneous chromosomal aberrations, cell cycle defects, altered nuclear morphology, reduced transcription of certain genes, and defective DNA damage response to ionizing radiation (IR). Here we show that MOF plays an essential role in mammals during embryogenesis and oncogenesis. Ablation of the mouse Mof gene (mMof) by gene targeting resulted in early embryonic lethality and cell death. Lethality correlated with the loss of H4 lysine 16 acetylation (H4K16ac) and could not be rescued by concomitant inactivation of ATM or p53. In comparison to primary cells or normal tissue, all immortalized human normal and tumor cell lines and primary tumors demonstrated similar or elevated hMOF and H4K16ac levels. Accordingly, MOF overexpression correlated with increased cellular proliferation, oncogenic transformation, and tumor growth. Thus, these data reveal that the acetylation of histone H4 at K16 by MOF is an epigenetic signature of cellular proliferation common to both embryogenesis and oncogenesis and that MOF is an essential factor for embryogenesis and oncogenesis.
Project description:The context preexposure facilitation effect (CPFE) is a contextual fear conditioning paradigm in which learning about the context, acquiring the context-shock association, and retrieving/expressing contextual fear are temporally dissociated into three distinct phases (context preexposure, immediate-shock training, and retention). The current study examined changes in the expression of plasticity-associated immediate early genes (IEGs) during context and contextual fear memory formation on the preexposure and training days of the CPFE, respectively. Using adolescent Long-Evans rats, preexposure and training day expression of the IEGs c-Fos, Arc, Egr-1, and Npas4 in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), dorsal hippocampus (dHPC), and basolateral amygdala (BLA) was analyzed using qPCR as an extension of previous studies from our lab examining Egr-1 via in situ hybridization (Asok, Schreiber, Jablonski, Rosen, & Stanton, 2013; Schreiber, Asok, Jablonski, Rosen, & Stanton, 2014). In Expt. 1, context preexposure induced expression of c-Fos, Arc, Egr-1 and Npas4 significantly above that of home-cage (HC) controls in all three regions. In Expt. 2, immediate-shock was followed by a post-shock freezing test, resulting in increased mPFC c-Fos expression in a group preexposed to the training context but not a control group preexposed to an alternate context, indicating expression related to associative learning. This was not seen with other IEGs in mPFC or with any IEG in dHPC or BLA. Finally, when the post-shock freezing test was omitted in Expt. 3, training-related increases were observed in prefrontal c-Fos, Arc, Egr-1, and Npas4, hippocampal c-Fos, and amygdalar Egr-1 expression. These results indicate that context exposure in a post-shock freezing test re-engages IEG expression that may obscure associatively-induced expression during contextual fear conditioning. Additionally, these studies suggest a key role for long-term synaptic plasticity in the mPFC in supporting the CPFE.
Project description:Although antipsychotics' mechanisms of action have been thoroughly investigated, they have not been fully elucidated at the network level. We tested the hypothesis that acute pre-treatment with ketamine (KET) and administration of asenapine (ASE) would modulate the functional connectivity of brain areas relevant to the pathophysiology of schizophrenia, based on transcript levels of Homer1a, an immediate early gene encoding a key molecule of the dendritic spine. Sprague-Dawley rats (n = 20) were assigned to KET (30 mg/kg) or vehicle (VEH). Each pre-treatment group (n = 10) was randomly split into two arms, receiving ASE (0.3 mg/kg), or VEH. Homer1a mRNA levels were evaluated by in situ hybridization in 33 regions of interest (ROIs). We computed all possible pairwise Pearson correlations and generated a network for each treatment group. Acute KET challenge was associated with negative correlations between the medial portion of cingulate cortex/indusium griseum and other ROIs, not detectable in other treatment groups. KET/ASE group showed significantly higher inter-correlations between medial cingulate cortex/indusium griseum and lateral putamen, the upper lip of the primary somatosensory cortex, septal area nuclei, and claustrum, in comparison to the KET/VEH network. ASE exposure was associated with changes in subcortical-cortical connectivity and an increase in centrality measures of the cingulate cortex and lateral septal nuclei. In conclusion, ASE was found to finely regulate brain connectivity by modelling the synaptic architecture and restoring a functional pattern of interregional co-activation.
Project description:Thermotaxis is important for animal survival, but the molecular identities of temperature sensors controlling this behavior have not been determined. We demonstrate dTRPA1, a heat-activated Transient Receptor Potential (TRP) family ion channel, is essential for thermotaxis in Drosophila. dTrpA1 knockdown eliminates avoidance of elevated temperatures along a thermal gradient. We observe dTRPA1 expression in cells without previously ascribed roles in thermosensation and implicate dTRPA1-expressing neurons in mediating thermotaxis. Our data suggest that thermotaxis relies upon neurons and molecules distinct from those required for high-temperature nociception. We propose dTRPA1 may control thermotaxis by sensing environmental temperature.