共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
McLachlan E White TW Ugonabo C Olson C Nagy JI Valdimarsson G 《Journal of neuroscience research》2003,73(6):753-764
The vertebrate connexin gene family encodes protein subunits of gap junction channels, which provide a route for direct intercellular communication. Consequently, gap junctions play a vital role in many developmental and homeostatic processes. Aberrant functioning of gap junctions is implicated in many human diseases. Zebrafish are an ideal vertebrate model to study development of the visual system as they produce transparent embryos that develop rapidly, thereby facilitating morphological and behavioral testing. In this study, zebrafish connexin35 has been cloned from a P1 artificial chromosome (PAC) library. Sequence analysis shows a high degree of similarity to the Cx35/36 orthologous group, which are expressed primarily in nervous tissue, including the retina. The gene encodes a 304-amino acid protein with a predicted molecular weight of approximately 35 kDa. Injection of zebrafish Cx35 RNA into paired Xenopus oocytes elicited intercellular electrical coupling with weak voltage sensitivity. In development, Cx35 is first detectable by Northern analysis and RT-PCR, at 2 days post-fertilization (2 dpf), and in the adult it is expressed in the brain and retina. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed that the Cx35 protein is expressed in two sublaminae of the inner plexiform layer of the adult retina. A similar pattern was seen in the 4 and 5 dpf retina, but no labeling was detected in the retina of earlier embryos. 相似文献
2.
Photoreceptors in the vertebrate retina are electrically coupled with one another. Such coupling plays important roles in visual information processing. Physiological properties of rod-rod and rod-cone coupling have been best studied in the salamander retina, yet the cellular and molecular basis of these electrical synapses has not been established. Recently, connexin35/36 (Cx35/36) gap junction proteins were found to be highly expressed in brain and retina, suggesting that it may mediate photoreceptor coupling. To test this idea, we examined the cellular distribution of Cx35/36 in the salamander retina. Western blot analysis showed the expression of Cx35/36 proteins, and confocal microscopy revealed characteristic punctate Cx35/36 immunoreactivity in both synaptic layers. In addition, Cx35/36-positive plaques were detected in the outer nuclear layer (ONL) between neighboring rods, and these plaques outlined the mosaic of the rod network at a level distal to the external limiting membrane. Moreover, although Cx35/36 plaques were detected between some cones and their adjacent rods, the number and size of these plaques was smaller, and their staining intensity was diminished compared with the plaques between adjacent rods. Furthermore, Lucifer yellow injection together with confocal microscopy revealed that Cx35/36-puncta were colocalized with finlike structures of rod cell membrane, with the ultrastructure of gap junctions between paired rod fins having been found by electron microscopy. Therefore, our findings demonstrate that Cx35/36 expression in photoreceptors is primarily located between rods and to a lesser extent between rods and cones, suggesting that Cx35/36 may participate in electrical coupling between rods and between rods and cones in the salamander retina. 相似文献
3.
4.
Degen J Meier C Van Der Giessen RS Söhl G Petrasch-Parwez E Urschel S Dermietzel R Schilling K De Zeeuw CI Willecke K 《The Journal of comparative neurology》2004,473(4):511-525
Targeted deletion of the connexin36 (Cx36) gene in the mouse genome leads to visual transmission defects, weakened synchrony of rhythmic inhibitory potentials in the neocortex, and disruption of gamma-frequency network oscillations. We have generated transgenic mice in which a reporter protein consisting of the exon1 coded N-terminal part of Cx36 fused to beta-galactosidase (N36-beta-gal) is expressed instead of Cx36. Here, we have used these mice for a detailed analysis of the reporter gene expression. By beta-gal staining of adult retina, we found expression of the lacZ reporter gene in the ganglion cell layer, in two rows of the inner nuclear layer, and in the photoreceptor layer. In the brain, beta-gal staining was present in gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)ergic neurons of the cerebellar nuclei, in non-GABAergic neurons of the inferior olive, in mitral cells of the olfactory bulb, and in parvalbumin-positive cells of the cerebral cortex. Outside the central nervous system, N36-beta-gal signals were detected in insulin producing beta-cells of the pancreas and in the medulla of the adrenal gland of adult Cx36(+/del[LacZ]) mice. This expression pattern suggests that Cx36 fulfills functional roles not only in several types of neurons in the retina and central nervous system but also in excitable cells of the pancreas and adrenal gland. 相似文献
5.
A.H. Kihara V. Paschon C.M. Cardoso G.S.V. Higa L.M. Castro D.E. Hamassaki L.R.G. Britto 《The Journal of comparative neurology》2009,512(5):651-663
Electrical coupling provided by connexins (Cx) in gap junctions (GJ) plays important roles in both the developing and the mature retina. In mammalian nocturnal species, Cx36 is an essential component in the rod pathway, the retinal circuit specialized for night, scotopic vision. Here, we report the expression of Cx36 in a species (Gallus gallus) that phylogenetic development endows with an essentially rodless retina. Cx36 gene is very highly expressed in comparison with other Cxs previously described in the adult retina, such as Cx43, Cx45, and Cx50. Moreover, real‐time PCR, Western blot, and immunofluorescence all revealed that Cx36 expression massively increased over time during development. We thoroughly examined Cx36 in the inner and outer plexiform layers, where this protein was particularly abundant. Cx36 was observed mainly in the off sublamina of the inner plexiform layer rather than in the on sublamina previously described in the mammalian retina. In addition, Cx36 colocalized with specific cell markers, revealing the expression of this protein in distinct amacrine cells. To investigate further the involvement of Cx36 in visual processing, we examined its functional regulation in retinas from dark‐adapted animals. Light deprivation markedly up‐regulates Cx36 gene expression in the retina, resulting in an increased accumulation of the protein within and between cone synaptic terminals. In summary, the developmental regulation of Cx36 expression results in particular circuitry‐related roles in the chick retina. Moreover, this study demonstrated that Cx36 onto‐ and phylogenesis in the vertebrate retina simultaneously exhibit similarities and particularities. J. Comp. Neurol. 512:651–663, 2009. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc. 相似文献
6.
Champeil-Potokar G Chaumontet C Guesnet P Lavialle M Denis I 《The European journal of neuroscience》2006,24(11):3084-3090
Although it is agreed that n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) are important for brain function, it has yet to be demonstrated how they are involved in precise cellular mechanisms. We investigated the role of enhanced n-3 PUFA in astrocyte membranes on the gap junction capacity of these cells. Astrocytes isolated from newborn rat cortices were grown in medium supplemented with docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), the main n-3 PUFA in cell membranes, or arachidonic acid (AA), the main n-6 PUFA, plus an antioxidant (alpha-tocopherol or N-acetyl-cystein) to prevent peroxidation. The resulting three populations of astrocytes differed markedly in their n-3:n-6 PUFA ratios in phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylcholine, the main phospholipids in membranes. DHA-supplemented cells had a physiological high n-3:n-6 ratio (1.58), unsupplemented cells had a low n-3:n-6 ratio (0.66) and AA-supplemented cells had a very low n-3:n-6 ratio (0.36), with excess n-6 PUFA. DHA-supplemented astrocytes had a greater gap junction capacity than unsupplemented cells or AA-supplemented cells. The enhanced gap junction coupling of DHA-enriched cells was associated with a more functional distribution of connexin 43 at cell interfaces (shown by immunocytochemistry) and more of the main phosphorylated isoform of connexin 43. These findings suggest that the high n-3:n-6 PUFA ratio that occurs naturally in astrocyte membranes is needed for optimal gap junction coupling in these cells. 相似文献
7.
8.
Vitalis T Lainé J Simon A Roland A Leterrier C Lenkei Z 《The European journal of neuroscience》2008,28(9):1705-1718
In the rodent and human embryonic brains, the cerebral cortex and hippocampus transiently express high levels of type 1 cannabinoid receptors (CB(1)Rs), at a developmental stage when these areas are composed mainly of glutamatergic neurons. However, the precise cellular and subcellular localization of CB(1)R expression as well as effects of CB(1)R modulation in this cell population remain largely unknown. We report that, starting from embryonic day 12.5, CB(1)Rs are strongly expressed in both reelin-expressing Cajal-Retzius cells and newly differentiated postmitotic glutamatergic neurons of the mouse telencephalon. CB(1)R protein is localized first to somato-dendritic endosomes and at later developmental stages it localizes mostly to developing axons. In young axons, CB(1)Rs are localized both to the axolemma and to large, often multivesicular endosomes. Acute maternal injection of agonist CP-55940 results in the relocation of receptors from axons to somato-dendritic endosomes, indicating the functional competence of embryonic CB(1)Rs. The adult phenotype of CB(1)R expression is established around postnatal day 5. By using pharmacological and mutational modulation of CB(1)R activity in isolated cultured rat hippocampal neurons, we also show that basal activation of CB(1)R acts as a negative regulatory signal for dendritogenesis, dendritic and axonal outgrowth, and branching. Together, the overall negative regulatory role in neurite development suggests that embryonic CB(1)R signaling may participate in the correct establishment of neuronal connectivity and suggests a possible mechanism for the development of reported glutamatergic dysfunction in the offspring following maternal cannabis consumption. 相似文献
9.
In albino rats the superior colliculus was stimulated and its evoked potentials were explored throughout the posterior vermis of the cerebellum. Climbing fiber responses were identified only in lobule VII, ipsilaterally 1.2–1.6 mm wide. In the medial accessory olive, subnucleus c, in the contralateral side both antidromically evoked potentials from lobule VII and orthodromically evoked potentials from the superior colliculus were recorded. This evidence suggests that they are tecto-olivoerebellar projections. 相似文献
10.
With the advent of transgenic mice, much has been learned about the expression and function of gap junctions. Previously, we reported that retinal ganglion cells in mice lacking the neuronal gap junction protein connexin 36 (Cx36) have nearly normal firing patterns at postnatal day 4 (P4) but many more asynchronous action potentials than wild-type mice at P10 (Torborg et al. [2005] Nat. Neurosci. 8:72-78). With the goal of understanding the origin of this increased activity in Cx36-/- mice, we used a transgenic mouse (Deans et al. [2001] Neuron 31:477-485) to characterize the developmental expression of a Cx36 reporter in the retina. We found that Cx36 was first detected weakly at P2 and gradually increased in expression until it reached an adult pattern at P14. Although the onset of expression varied by cell type, we identified Cx36 in the glycinergic AII amacrine cell, glutamatergic cone bipolar cell, and retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). In addition, we used calcium imaging and multielectrode array recording to characterize further the firing patterns in Cx36-/- mice. Both correlated and asynchronous action potentials in P10 Cx36-/- RGCs were significantly inhibited by bath application of an ionotropic glutamate receptor antagonist, indicating that the increase in activity was synaptically mediated. Hence, both the expression patterns and the physiology suggest an increasing role for Cx36-containing gap junctions in suppressing RGC firing between waves during postnatal retinal development. 相似文献
11.
Dedek K Schultz K Pieper M Dirks P Maxeiner S Willecke K Weiler R Janssen-Bienhold U 《The European journal of neuroscience》2006,24(6):1675-1686
The primary rod pathway in mammals contains gap junctions between AII amacrine cells and ON cone bipolar cells which relay the rod signal into the cone pathway under scotopic conditions. Two gap junctional proteins, connexin36 (Cx36) and connexin45 (Cx45), appear to play a pivotal role in this pathway because lack of either protein leads to an impairment of visual transmission under scotopic conditions. To investigate whether these connexins form heterotypic gap junctions between ON cone bipolar and AII amacrine cells, we used newly developed Cx45 antibodies and studied the cellular and subcellular distribution of this protein in the mouse retina. Specificity of the Cx45 antibodies was determined, among others, by Western blot and immunostaining of mouse heart, where Cx45 is abundantly expressed. In mouse retina, Cx45 immunosignals were detected in both plexiform layers and the ganglion cell layer. Double staining for Cx45 and Cx36 revealed a partial overlap in the punctate patterns in the ON sublamina of the inner plexiform layer of the retina. We quantified the distributions of these two connexins in the ON sublamina, and detected 30% of the Cx45 signals to be co-localized with or in close apposition to Cx36 signals. Combining immunostaining and intracellular dye injection revealed an overlap or tight association of Cx36 and Cx45 signals on the terminals of injected AII amacrine and two types of ON cone bipolar cells. Our results provide direct evidence for heterotypic gap junctions composed of Cx36 and Cx45 between AII amacrine and certain types of ON cone bipolar cells. 相似文献
12.
Sekine-Aizawa Y Hama E Watanabe K Tsubuki S Kanai-Azuma M Kanai Y Arai H Aizawa H Iwata N Saido TC 《The European journal of neuroscience》2001,13(5):935-948
The matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) family, comprising more than 20 isoforms, modulates the extracellular milieu by degrading extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. Because MMP is one of the few groups of proteinases capable of hydrolysing insoluble fibrillar proteins, they are likely to play crucial roles in regulating both normal and pathophysiological processes in the brain. However, little is yet known about their possible neuronal functions due presumably to their unusual redundancy and to the absence of a complete catalogue of isoforms. As an initial step in understanding the MMP system in the brain, we analysed an expression spectrum of MMP in rat brain using RT-PCR and discovered a novel brain-specific MMP, MT5-MMP. MT5-MMP was the predominant species among the nongelatinase-type isoforms in brain. MT5-MMP, present in all brain tissues examined, was most strongly expressed in cerebellum and was localized in the membranous structures of expressing neurons, as assessed biochemically and immunohistochemically. In cerebellum, its expression was regulated developmentally and was closely associated with dendritic tree formation of Purkinje cells, suggesting that MT5-MMP may contribute to neuronal development. Furthermore, its stable postdevelopmental expression and colocalization with senile plaques in Alzheimer brain indicates possible roles in neuronal remodeling naturally occurring in adulthood and in regulating pathophysiological processes associated with advanced age. 相似文献
13.
Galeeva A Treuter E Tuohimaa P Pelto-Huikko M 《The European journal of neuroscience》2002,15(4):671-683
Disinhibition reliably induces regular synchronous bursting in networks of spinal interneurons in culture as well as in the intact spinal cord. We have combined extracellular multisite recording using multielectrode arrays with whole cell recordings to investigate the mechanisms involved in bursting in organotypic and dissociated cultures from the spinal cords of embryonic rats. Network bursts induced depolarization and spikes in single neurons, which were mediated by recurrent excitation through glutamatergic synaptic transmission. When such transmission was blocked, bursting ceased. However, tonic spiking persisted in some of the neurons. In such neurons intrinsic spiking was suppressed following the bursts and reappeared in the intervals after several seconds. The suppression of intrinsic spiking could be reproduced when, in the absence of fast synaptic transmission, bursts were mimicked by the injection of current pulses. Intrinsic spiking was also suppressed by a slight hyperpolarization. An afterhyperpolarization following the bursts was found in roughly half of the neurons. These afterhyperpolarizations were combined with a decrease in excitability. No evidence for the involvement of synaptic depletion or receptor desensitization in bursting was found, because neither the rate nor the size of spontaneous excitatory postsynaptic currents were decreased following the bursts. Extracellular stimuli paced bursts at low frequencies, but failed to induce bursts when applied too soon after the last burst. Altogether these results suggest that bursting in spinal cultures is mainly based on intrinsic spiking in some neurons, recurrent excitation of the network and auto-regulation of neuronal excitability. 相似文献
14.
15.
Conzelmann S Levai O Bode B Eisel U Raming K Breer H Strotmann J 《The European journal of neuroscience》2000,12(11):3926-3934
Three novel G-protein-coupled receptor genes related to the previously described RA1c gene have been isolated from the mouse genome. Expression of these genes has been detected in distinct areas of the brain and also in the olfactory epithelium of the nose. Developmental studies revealed a differential onset of expression: in the brain at embryonic stage 17, in the olfactory system at stage E12. In order to determine which cell type in the olfactory epithelium expresses this unique receptor type, a transgenic approach was employed which allowed a coexpression of histological markers together with the receptor and thus visualization of the appropriate cell population. It was found that the receptor-expressing cells were located very close to the basal membrane of the epithelium; however, the cells extended a dendritic process to the epithelial surface and their axons projected into the main olfactory bulb where they converged onto two or three glomeruli in the dorsal and posterior region of the bulb. Thus, these data provide evidence that this unique type of receptor is expressed in mature olfactory neurons and suggests that it may be involved in the detection of special odour molecules. 相似文献
16.
Cuenca N Herrero MT Angulo A de Juan E Martínez-Navarrete GC López S Barcia C Martín-Nieto J 《The Journal of comparative neurology》2005,493(2):261-273
Physiological abnormalities resulting from death of dopaminergic neurons of the central nervous system in Parkinson's disease also extend to the retina, resulting in impaired visual functions. In both parkinsonian patients and animal models, low levels of dopamine and loss of dopaminergic cells in the retina have been reported. However, the morphology and connectivity of their postsynaptic neurons, the amacrine cells, have not been analyzed. Here we report, with macaques chronically treated with 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) as a model of Parkinson's disease, that morphological impairments in dopaminergic retinal neurons and their plexus in the inner retina are accompanied by an immunoreactivity decrease in gamma-aminobutyric acidergic and glycinergic amacrine cells. Especially deteriorated were AII amacrine cells, the main neuronal subtype postsynaptic to dopaminergic cells, which exhibited a marked loss of lobular appendages and dendritic processes. Concomitantly, electrical synapses among AII cells, as well as chemical synapses between these and rod bipolar cells, were highly deteriorated in parkinsonian monkeys. These results highlight that the scotopic visual pathway is severely impaired in the parkinsonian condition and provide a morphological basis for a number of abnormalities found in electrophysiological and psychophysical trials in Parkinson's disease patients and animal models. 相似文献
17.
18.
Zoidl G Meier C Petrasch-Parwez E Zoidl C Habbes HW Kremer M Srinivas M Spray DC Dermietzel R 《Journal of neuroscience research》2002,69(4):448-465
The expression and functional properties of connexin36 (Cx36) have been investigated in two neuroblastoma cell lines (Neuro2A, RT4-AC) and primary hippocampal neurons transfected with a Cx36-enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) expression vector. Transfected cells express Cx36-EGFP mRNA, and Cx36-EGFP protein is localized in the perinuclear area and cell membrane. Upon differentiation of cell lines, Cx36-EGFP protein was detectable in processes with both axonal and dendritic characteristics. Small gap junction plaques were found between adjacent cells, and electrophysiological recordings demonstrated that the electrical properties of these gap junctions were virtually indistinguishable from those reported for native Cx36. Mutagenesis of Cx36 led to the identification of a structural element that interferes with normal protein localization. In contrast, site directed mutagenesis of putative protein phosphorylation motifs did not alter subcellular localization. This excludes phosphorylation/dephosphorylation as a major regulatory step in Cx36 protein transport. 相似文献
19.
Pakan JM Krueger K Kelcher E Cooper S Todd KG Wylie DR 《The Journal of comparative neurology》2006,495(1):84-99
The avian nucleus lentiformis mesencephali (LM) is a visual structure involved in the optokinetic response. The LM consists of several morphologically distinct cell types. In the present study we sought to determine if different cell types had differential projections. Using retrograde tracers, we examined the morphology and distribution of LM neurons projecting to the vestibulocerebellum (VbC), inferior olive (IO), dorsal thalamus, nucleus of the basal optic root (nBOR), and midline mesencephalon. From injections into the latter two structures, small LM cells were labeled. More were localized to the lateral LM as opposed to medial LM. From injections into the dorsal thalamus, small neurons were found throughout LM. From injections into the VbC, large multipolar cells were found throughout LM. From injections into IO, a strip of medium-sized fusiform neurons along the border of the medial and lateral subnuclei was labeled. To investigate if neurons project to multiple targets we used fluorescent retrograde tracers. After injections into IO and VbC, double-labeled neurons were not observed in LM. Likewise, after injections into nBOR and IO, double-labeled neurons were not observed. Finally, we processed sections through LM for glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD). Small neurons, mostly in the lateral LM, were labeled, suggesting that projections from LM to nBOR and midline mesencephalon are GABAergic. We conclude that two efferents of LM, VbC and IO, receive input from morphologically distinct neurons: large multipolar and medium-sized fusiform neurons, respectively. The dorsal thalamus, nBOR, and midline mesencephalon receive input from small neurons, some of which are likely GABAergic. 相似文献
20.
Ulrike Janssen‐Bienhold Jennifer Trümpler Gerrit Hilgen Konrad Schultz Luis Pérez De Sevilla Müller Stephan Sonntag Karin Dedek Petra Dirks Klaus Willecke Reto Weiler 《The Journal of comparative neurology》2009,513(4):363-374
Mouse horizontal cells are coupled by gap junctions composed of connexin57. These gap junctions are regulated by ambient light via multiple neuromodulators including dopamine. In order to analyze the distribution and structure of horizontal cell gap junctions in the mouse retina, and examine the effects of light adaptation on gap junction density, we developed antibodies that detect mouse retinal connexin57. Using immunohistochemistry in retinal slices, flat‐mounted retinas, and dissociated retinal cells, we showed that connexin57 is expressed in the dendrites and axon terminal processes of mouse horizontal cells. No staining was found in retinas of connexin57‐deficient mice. Significantly more connexin57‐positive puncta were found in the distal than in the proximal outer plexiform layer, indicating a higher level of expression in axon terminal processes than in the dendrites. We also examined the gap junctions using immunoelectron microscopy and showed that connexin57 does not form hemichannels in the horizontal cell dendritic tips. Light adaptation resulted in a significant increase in the number of connexin57‐immunoreactive plaques in the outer plexiform layer, consistent with previously reported effects of light adaptation on connexin57 expression in the mouse retina. This study shows for the first time the detailed location of connexin57 expression within mouse horizontal cells, and provides the first ultrastructural data on mouse horizontal cell gap junctions. J. Comp. Neurol. 513:363–374, 2009. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc. 相似文献