共济失调相关DNA修复基因保护果蝇菇体和运动功能免受谷氨酸信号相关损伤。

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES
Ilse Eidhof, Alina Krebbers, Bart van de Warrenburg, Annette Schenck
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对运动的精确控制对动物王国的所有行为都至关重要。有效的运动行为依赖于专用的神经回路——比如小脑中的神经回路——由广泛的遗传程序控制。常染色体隐性小脑共济失调(ARCAs)为研究遗传程序之间的相互作用如何维持小脑运动回路提供了一个有价值的切入点。我们之前在ARCAs中发现了DNA修复基因的显著富集。然而,arca相关DNA修复基因的功能障碍如何导致小脑优先功能障碍和运动功能受损尚不清楚。ARCA DNA修复基因的表达并不局限于小脑。只有有限数量的DNA修复ARCAs动物模型存在,即使是这些,DNA修复缺陷、小脑回路功能障碍和运动行为之间的联系也几乎没有建立起来。我们使用黑腹果蝇来表征蘑菇体(MB)中arca相关DNA修复基因的功能,蘑菇体是果蝇中脑的一种结构,与小脑具有相同的结构特征。在这里,我们证明了MB是有效的惊吓诱导和自发运动行为所必需的。在一些实验中,突触传递的抑制和arca相关DNA修复基因的功能丧失影响了MB的运动行为。这些运动缺陷与MB DNA损伤水平增加、MB Kenyon细胞凋亡和/或MB形态改变相关。我们进一步表明,参与谷氨酸信号通路的基因表达在出生后的人类小脑中高度,特异性和持续升高。谷氨酸信号在MB诱导的运动缺陷、Kenyon细胞DNA损伤和凋亡中的调控作用。重要的是,在ARCA DNA修复模型中,谷氨酸信号的药理减少挽救了已确定的运动缺陷,这表明异常谷氨酸信号在ARCA-DNA修复障碍中的作用。总之,我们的数据强调了arca相关DNA修复基因和谷氨酸信号通路对小脑、果蝇MB和运动行为的重要性。我们提出谷氨酸信号可能在arca相关的DNA修复疾病中赋予小脑优先易感性。针对谷氨酸信号可以提供一个令人兴奋的治疗切入点,在这一大组迄今无法治愈的疾病。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Ataxia-associated DNA repair genes protect the Drosophila mushroom body and locomotor function against glutamate signaling-associated damage.

The precise control of motor movements is of fundamental importance to all behaviors in the animal kingdom. Efficient motor behavior depends on dedicated neuronal circuits - such as those in the cerebellum - that are controlled by extensive genetic programs. Autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxias (ARCAs) provide a valuable entry point into how interactions between genetic programs maintain cerebellar motor circuits. We previously identified a striking enrichment of DNA repair genes in ARCAs. How dysfunction of ARCA-associated DNA repair genes leads to preferential cerebellar dysfunction and impaired motor function is however unknown. The expression of ARCA DNA repair genes is not specific to the cerebellum. Only a limited number of animal models for DNA repair ARCAs exist, and, even for these, the interconnection between DNA repair defects, cerebellar circuit dysfunction, and motor behavior is barely established. We used Drosophila melanogaster to characterize the function of ARCA-associated DNA repair genes in the mushroom body (MB), a structure in the Drosophila central brain that shares structural features with the cerebellum. Here, we demonstrate that the MB is required for efficient startle-induced and spontaneous motor behaviors. Inhibition of synaptic transmission and loss-of-function of ARCA-associated DNA repair genes in the MB affected motor behavior in several assays. These motor deficits correlated with increased levels of MB DNA damage, MB Kenyon cell apoptosis and/or alterations in MB morphology. We further show that expression of genes involved in glutamate signaling pathways are highly, specifically, and persistently elevated in the postnatal human cerebellum. Manipulation of glutamate signaling in the MB induced motor defects, Kenyon cell DNA damage and apoptosis. Importantly, pharmacological reduction of glutamate signaling in the ARCA DNA repair models rescued the identified motor deficits, suggesting a role for aberrant glutamate signaling in ARCA-DNA repair disorders. In conclusion, our data highlight the importance of ARCA-associated DNA repair genes and glutamate signaling pathways to the cerebellum, the Drosophila MB and motor behavior. We propose that glutamate signaling may confer preferential cerebellar vulnerability in ARCA-associated DNA repair disorders. Targeting glutamate signaling could provide an exciting therapeutic entry point in this large group of so far untreatable disorders.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
5.70%
发文量
135
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Neural Circuits publishes rigorously peer-reviewed research on the emergent properties of neural circuits - the elementary modules of the brain. Specialty Chief Editors Takao K. Hensch and Edward Ruthazer at Harvard University and McGill University respectively, are supported by an outstanding Editorial Board of international experts. This multidisciplinary open-access journal is at the forefront of disseminating and communicating scientific knowledge and impactful discoveries to researchers, academics and the public worldwide. Frontiers in Neural Circuits launched in 2011 with great success and remains a "central watering hole" for research in neural circuits, serving the community worldwide to share data, ideas and inspiration. Articles revealing the anatomy, physiology, development or function of any neural circuitry in any species (from sponges to humans) are welcome. Our common thread seeks the computational strategies used by different circuits to link their structure with function (perceptual, motor, or internal), the general rules by which they operate, and how their particular designs lead to the emergence of complex properties and behaviors. Submissions focused on synaptic, cellular and connectivity principles in neural microcircuits using multidisciplinary approaches, especially newer molecular, developmental and genetic tools, are encouraged. Studies with an evolutionary perspective to better understand how circuit design and capabilities evolved to produce progressively more complex properties and behaviors are especially welcome. The journal is further interested in research revealing how plasticity shapes the structural and functional architecture of neural circuits.
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