Drosophila Ten-m and Filamin Affect Motor Neuron Growth Cone Guidance
Author(s) -
Lihua Zheng,
Yehudit Michelson,
Vita Freger,
Ziva Avraham,
Koen J. T. Venken,
Hugo J. Bellen,
Monica J. Justice,
Ron Wides
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0022956
Subject(s) - filamin , growth cone , axon guidance , biology , motor neuron , phenotype , flna , microbiology and biotechnology , axon , nervous system , gene , neuroscience , anatomy , genetics , cytoskeleton , cell , spinal cord
The Drosophila Ten-m (also called Tenascin-major , or odd Oz (odz)) gene has been associated with a pair-rule phenotype. We identified and characterized new alleles of Drosophila Ten-m to establish that this gene is not responsible for segmentation defects but rather causes defects in motor neuron axon routing. In Ten-m mutants the inter-segmental nerve (ISN) often crosses segment boundaries and fasciculates with the ISN in the adjacent segment. Ten-m is expressed in the central nervous system and epidermal stripes during the stages when the growth cones of the neurons that form the ISN navigate to their targets. Over-expression of Ten-m in epidermal cells also leads to ISN misrouting. We also found that Filamin, an actin binding protein, physically interacts with the Ten-m protein. Mutations in cheerio , which encodes Filamin, cause defects in motor neuron axon routing like those of Ten-m . During embryonic development, the expression of Filamin and Ten-m partially overlap in ectodermal cells. These results suggest that Ten-m and Filamin in epidermal cells might together influence growth cone progression.
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