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Flies lacking all synapsins are unexpectedly healthy but are impaired in complex behaviour
Author(s) -
Godenschwege Tanja A.,
Reisch Dietmar,
Diegelmann Sören,
Eberle Kai,
Funk Natalja,
Heisenberg Martin,
Hoppe Viviane,
Hoppe Jürgen,
Klagges Bert R. E.,
Martin JeanRené,
Nikitina Ekaterina A.,
Putz Gabi,
Reifegerste Rita,
Reisch Natascha,
Rister Jens,
Schaupp Michael,
Scholz Henrike,
Schwärzel Martin,
Werner Ursula,
Zars Troy D.,
Buchner Sigrid,
Buchner Erich
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
european journal of neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.346
H-Index - 206
eISSN - 1460-9568
pISSN - 0953-816X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2004.03527.x
Subject(s) - synapsin , synapsin i , biology , neuroscience , neurotransmitter , synapse , mutant , habituation , synaptic vesicle , microbiology and biotechnology , neurotransmission , genetics , gene , central nervous system , vesicle , receptor , membrane
Vertebrate synapsins are abundant synaptic vesicle phosphoproteins that have been proposed to fine‐regulate neurotransmitter release by phosphorylation‐dependent control of synaptic vesicle motility. However, the consequences of a total lack of all synapsin isoforms due to a knock‐out of all three mouse synapsin genes have not yet been investigated. In Drosophila a single synapsin gene encodes several isoforms and is expressed in most synaptic terminals. Thus the targeted deletion of the synapsin gene of Drosophila eliminates the possibility of functional knock‐out complementation by other isoforms. Unexpectedly, synapsin null mutant flies show no obvious defects in brain morphology, and no striking qualitative changes in behaviour are observed. Ultrastructural analysis of an identified ‘model’ synapse of the larval nerve muscle preparation revealed no difference between wild‐type and mutant, and spontaneous or evoked excitatory junction potentials at this synapse were normal up to a stimulus frequency of 5 Hz. However, when several behavioural responses were analysed quantitatively, specific differences between mutant and wild‐type flies are noted. Adult locomotor activity, optomotor responses at high pattern velocities, wing beat frequency, and visual pattern preference are modified. Synapsin mutant flies show faster habituation of an olfactory jump response, enhanced ethanol tolerance, and significant defects in learning and memory as measured using three different paradigms. Larval behavioural defects are described in a separate paper. We conclude that Drosophila synapsins play a significant role in nervous system function, which is subtle at the cellular level but manifests itself in complex behaviour.