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TRPA channels distinguish gravity sensing from hearing in Johnston's organ
Authors:Yishan Sun  Lei Liu  Yehuda Ben-Shahar  Julie S Jacobs  Daniel F Eberl  and Michael J Welsh
Institution:aNeuroscience Graduate Program.;bDepartment of Internal Medicine.;cDepartment of Biology.;dHoward Hughes Medical Institute, and ;eDepartment of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242
Abstract:Although many animal species sense gravity for spatial orientation, the molecular bases remain uncertain. Therefore, we studied Drosophila melanogaster, which possess an inherent upward movement against gravity-negative geotaxis. Negative geotaxis requires Johnston's organ, a mechanosensory structure located in the antenna that also detects near-field sound. Because channels of the transient receptor potential (TRP) superfamily can contribute to mechanosensory signaling, we asked whether they are important for negative geotaxis. We identified distinct expression patterns for 5 TRP genes; the TRPV genes nanchung and inactive were present in most Johnston's organ neurons, the TRPN gene nompC and the TRPA gene painless were localized to 2 subpopulations of neurons, and the TRPA gene pyrexia was expressed in cap cells that may interact with the neurons. Likewise, mutating specific TRP genes produced distinct phenotypes, disrupting negative geotaxis (painless and pyrexia), hearing (nompC), or both (nanchung and inactive). Our genetic, physiological and behavioral data indicate that the sensory component of negative geotaxis involves multiple TRP genes. The results also distinguish between different mechanosensory modalities and set the stage for understanding how TRP channels contribute to mechanosensation.
Keywords:Drosophila  transient receptor potential  geotaxis
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