Regulation of Drosophila Brain Wiring by Neuropil Interactions via a Slit-Robo-RPTP Signaling Complex

Archive ouverte

Oliva, Carlos | Soldano, Alissia | Mora, Natalia | Claeys, Annelies | Erfurth, Maria-Luise | Sierralta, Jimena | Ramaekers, Ariane | Dascenco, Dan | K. Ejsmont, Radoslaw | Schmucker, Dietmar | Sanchez-Soriano, Natalia | Hassan, Bassem A.

Edité par CCSD ; Elsevier -

International audience. The axonal wiring molecule Slit and its Round-About (Robo) receptors are conserved regulators of nerve cord patterning. Robo receptors also contribute to wiring brain circuits. Whether molecular mechanisms regulating these signals are modified to fit more complex brain wiring processes is unclear. We investigated the role of Slit and Robo receptors in wiring Drosophila higher-order brain circuits and identified differences in the cellular and molecular mechanisms of Robo/Slit function. First, we find that signaling by Robo receptors in the brain is regulated by the Receptor Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase RPTP69d. RPTP69d increases membrane availability of Robo3 without affecting its phosphorylation state. Second, we detect no midline localization of Slit during brain development. Instead, Slit is enriched in the mushroom body, a neuronal structure covering large areas of the brain. Thus, a divergent molecular mechanism regulates neuronal circuit wiring in the Drosophila brain, partly in response to signals from the mushroom body.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Axon morphogenesis and maintenance require an evolutionary conserved safeguard function of Wnk kinases antagonizing Sarm and Axed

Archive ouverte | Izadifar, Azadeh | CCSD

International audience

Slit/Robo Signaling Regulates Multiple Stages of the Development of the Drosophila Motion Detection System

Archive ouverte | Guzmán-Palma, Pablo | CCSD

International audience. Neurogenesis is achieved through a sequence of steps that include specification and differentiation of progenitors into mature neurons. Frequently, precursors migrate to distinct positions be...

A Fat-Facets-Dscam1-JNK Pathway Enhances Axonal Growth in Development and after Injury

Archive ouverte | Koch, Marta | CCSD

International audience. Injury to the adult central nervous systems (CNS) can result in severe long-term disability because damaged CNS connections fail to regenerate after trauma. Identification of regulators that ...

Chargement des enrichissements...