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Der zur Familie der pentameren ligandengesteuerten Ionenkanäle zugehörige Glycinrezeptor (GlyR) ist ein wichtiger Vermittler synaptischer Inhibition im Zentralnervensystem von Säugetieren. GlyR-Mutationen führen zur neurologischen Bewegungsstörung Hyperekplexie. Aufgrund fehlender struktureller Daten ist die intrazelluläre Loop-Struktur zwischen den Transmembransegmenten 3 und 4 (TM3-4 Loop) eine weitgehend unerforschte Domäne des GlyR. Innerhalb dieser Domäne wurden Rezeptortrunkierungen sowie Punktmutationen identifiziert. Rezeptortrunkierung geht mit Funktionslosigkeit einher, welche jedoch durch Koexpression des fehlenden Sequenzabschnitts zum Teil wiederhergestellt werden kann. Innerhalb dieser Arbeit wurde die Interaktion zwischen trunkierten, funktionslosen GlyR und sukzessiv verkürzten Komplementationskonstrukten untersucht. Dabei wurden als Minimaldomänen für die Interaktion das C-terminalen basische Motive des TM3-4 Loops, die TM4 sowie der extrazelluläre C-Terminus identifiziert. Die Rückkreuzung transgener Mäuse, die das Komplementationskonstrukt iD-TM4 unter Kontrolle des GlyR-Promotors exprimierten, mit der oscillator-Maus spdot, die einen trunkierten GlyR exprimiert und 3 Wochen nach der Geburt verstirbt, hatte aufgrund fehlender Proteinexpression keinen Effekt auf die Letalität der Mutation. Des Weiteren wurde die Bedeutsamkeit der Integrität beider basischer Motive 316RFRRKRR322 und 385KKIDKISR392 im TM3-4 Loop in Kombination mit der Loop-Länge für die Funktionalität und das Desensitisierungsverhalten des humanen GlyRα1 anhand von chimären Rezeptoren identifiziert. Eine bisher unbekannte Patientenmutation P366L innerhalb des TM3-4 Loops wurde mit molekularbiologischen, biochemischen und elektrophysiologischen Methoden charakterisiert. Es wurde gezeigt, dass die mutierten Rezeptorkomplexe in vitro deutlich reduzierte Glycin-induzierte Maximalströme sowie eine beschleunigte Schließkinetik aufweisen. P366L hat im Gegensatz zu bereits charakterisierten Hyperekplexiemutationen innerhalb des TM3-4 Loops keinen Einfluss auf die Biogenese des Rezeptors. P366 ist Teil einer möglichen Poly-Prolin-Helix, die eine Erkennungssequenz für SH3-Domänen darstellt. Ein potenzieller Interaktionspartner des TM3-4 Loops des GlyRα1 ist Collybistin, welches eine wichtige Rolle bei der synaptischen Rezeptorintegration spielt und die Verbindung zum Zytoskelett vermittelt. An der inhibitorischen Synapse verursacht P366L durch die Reduzierung postsynaptischer Chloridströme, das beschleunigte Desensitisierungsverhalten des GlyRα1 sowie ein verändertes Interaktionsmotiv Störungen der glycinergen Transmission, die zur Ausprägung phänotypischer Symptome der Hyperekplexie führen.
Aktive Zonen (AZs) sind hoch spezialisierte, subzelluläre Kompartimente von Neuronen, die der synaptischen Übertragung dienen. Sie enthalten Gerüstproteine wie RIM (Rab3 interacting molecule) sowie elektronendichte Projektionen bestehend aus Bruchpilot bei Drosophila melanogaster oder Bassoon im Säuger, welche Schlüsselkomponenten des Vesikelverkehrs darstellen. Bei der Fliege sind Anzahl und Verteilung von Bruchpilot-Molekülen in AZs relevant für die funktionelle Differenzierung. Ihre Anordnung wird im Abstand von weniger als einem Mikrometer innerhalb einer präsynaptischen Endigung reguliert.
Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden elektrophysiologische Ableitungen und konfokale sowie höchstauflösende, immunhistochemische Bildgebung mit dem dSTORM (direct Stochastic Optical Reconstruction Microscopy) Verfahren an larvalen, neuromuskulären Synapsen von Drosophila durchgeführt. Dabei wurde das genetische Potenzial des Modellorganismus genutzt, um relevante Proteinfunktionen und -interaktionen zu analysieren.
RIM als zentrale Komponente Aktiver Zonen ist relevant für synaptische Plastizität. Eine als CORD7 (cone-rod dystrophy type 7) bezeichnete Punktmutation (Arginin zu Histidin) innerhalb der 310 Helix der C2A-Domäne von RIM wurde mit erhöhten kognitiven Fähigkeiten einer Patientengruppe in Verbindung gebracht. Weil die Drosophila C2A-Domäne eine hohe Homologie zur Säugerdomäne aufweist, konnte der Einfluss dieser Mutation auf Struktur und Funktion von Synapsen untersucht werden. Es zeigte sich, dass der Aminosäureaustausch der CORD7-Position und des benachbarten Arginin-Restes die synaptische Organisation und Transmission beeinflussen.
In einer Reihe weiterer Experimente wurde das Zusammenspiel von Bruchpilot und Synaptotagmin, dem Calciumsensor der evozierten Transmitterfreisetzung, analysiert. Während AZs ohne Bruchpilot auch ohne Synaptotagmin funktionieren, führt dessen Reduktion zu einer Umverteilung von Bruchpilot-Molekülen innerhalb von AZs und zu dramatischen Änderungen in ihrer Anzahl. Abschließend wurde so ein Beitrag zum Verständnis der molekularen Organisation synaptischer Informationsverarbeitung und Plastizität geleistet, wobei zu klären bleibt, wie die zuverlässige Speicherung von Informationen an AZs erreicht werden kann.
Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war die nanoskopische Analyse struktureller Differenzierung und Plastizität präsynaptischer aktiver Zonen (AZs) an der NMJ von Drosophila melanogaster mittels hochauflösender, lichtmikroskopischer Bildgebung von Bruchpilot (Brp). In erster Linie wurde das lokalisationsmikroskopische Verfahren dSTORM angewendet. Es wurden neue Analyse-Algorithmen auf der Basis von HDBSCAN entwickelt, um eine objektive, in weiten Teilen automatisierte Quantifizierung bis auf Ebene der Substruktur der AZ zu ermöglichen. Die Differenzierung wurde am Beispiel phasischer und tonischer Synapsen, die an dieser NMJ durch Is- und Ib-Neurone gebildet werden, untersucht. Phasische Is-Synapsen mit hoher Freisetzungswahrscheinlichkeit zeigten kleinere, kompaktere AZs mit weniger Molekülen und höherer molekularer Dichte mit ebenfalls kleineren, kompakteren Brp-Subclustern. Akute strukturelle Plastizität wurde am Beispiel präsynaptischer Homöostase, bei der es zu einer kompensatorisch erhöhten Neurotransmitterfreisetzung kommt, analysiert. Interessanterweise zeigte sich hier ebenfalls eine kompaktere Konfiguration der AZ, die sich auch auf Ebene der Subcluster widerspiegelte, ohne Rekrutierung von Molekülen. Es konnte demonstriert werden, dass sich eine höhere Moleküldichte in der Lokalisationsmikroskopie in eine höhere Intensität und größere Fläche in der konfokalen Mikroskopie übersetzt, und damit der Zusammenhang zu scheinbar gegensätzlichen Vorbefunden hergestellt werden. Die Verdichtung bzw. Kompaktierung erscheint im Zusammenhang mit der Kopplungsdistanz zwischen VGCCs und präsynaptischen Vesikeln als plausibles Muster der effizienten Anordnung molekularer Komponenten der AZ. Die hier eingeführten Analysewerkzeuge und molekularbiologischen Strategien, basierend auf dem CRISPR/Cas9-System, zur Markierung von AZ-Komponenten können zukünftig zur weiteren Klärung der Bedeutung der molekularen Verdichtung als allgemeines Konzept der AZ-Differenzierung beitragen.
Large-scale anatomical and functional analyses of the connectivity in both invertebrate and mammalian brains have gained intense attention in recent years. At the same time, the understanding of synapses on a molecular level still lacks behind. We have only begun to unravel the basic mechanisms of how the most important synaptic proteins regulate release and reception of neurotransmitter molecules, as well as changes of synaptic strength. Furthermore, little is known regarding the stoichiometry of presynaptic proteins at different synapses within an organism. An assessment of these characteristics would certainly promote our comprehension of the properties of different synapse types. Presynaptic proteins directly influence, for example, the probability of neurotransmitter release as well as mechanisms for short-term plasticity. We have examined the strength of expression of several presynaptic proteins at different synapse types in the central nervous system of Drosophila melanogaster using immunohistochemistry. Clear differences in the relative abundances of the proteins were obvious on different levels: variations in staining intensities appeared from the neuropil to the synaptic level. In order to quantify these differences, we have developed a ratiometric analysis of antibody stainings. By application of this ratiometric method, we could assign average ratios of presynaptic proteins to different synapse populations in two central relays of the olfactory pathway. In this manner, synapse types could be characterized by distinct fingerprints of presynaptic protein ratios. Subsequently, we used the method for the analysis of aberrant situations: we reduced levels of Bruchpilot, a major presynaptic protein, and ablated different synapse or cell types. Evoked changes of ratio fingerprints were proportional to the modifications we had induced in the system. Thus, such ratio signatures are well suited for the characterization of synapses. In order to contribute to our understanding of both the molecular composition and the function of synapses, we also characterized a novel synaptic protein. This protein, Drep-2, is a member of the Dff family of regulators of apoptosis. We generated drep-2 mutants, which did not show an obvious misregulation of apoptosis. By contrast, Drep-2 was found to be a neuronal protein, highly enriched for example at postsynaptic receptor fields of the input synapses of the major learning centre of insects, the mushroom bodies. Flies mutant for drep-2 were viable but lived shorter than wildtypes. Basic synaptic transmission at both peripheral and central synapses was in normal ranges. However, drep-2 mutants showed a number of deficiencies in adaptive behaviours: adult flies were locomotor hyperactive and hypersensitive towards ethanol-induced sedation. Moreover, the mutant animals were heavily impaired in associative learning. In aversive olfactory conditioning, drep-2 mutants formed neither short-term nor anaesthesia-sensitive memories. We could demonstrate that Drep-2 is required in mushroom body intrinsic neurons for normal olfactory learning. Furthermore, odour-evoked calcium transients in these neurons, a prerequisite for learning, were reduced in drep-2 mutants. The impairment of the mutants in olfactory learning could be fully rescued by pharmacological application of an agonist to metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs). Quantitative mass spectrometry of Drep-2 complexes revealed that the protein is associated with a large number of translational repressors, among them the fragile X mental retardation protein FMRP. FMRP inhibits mGluR-mediated protein synthesis. Lack of this protein causes the fragile X syndrome, which constitutes the most frequent monogenic cause of autism. Examination of the performance of drep-2 mutants in courtship conditioning showed that the animals were deficient in both short- and long-term memory. Drep-2 mutants share these phenotypes with fmrp and mGluR mutants. Interestingly, drep-2; fmrp double mutants exhibited normal memory. Thus, we propose a model in which Drep-2 antagonizes FMRP in the regulation of mGluR-dependent protein synthesis. Our hypothesis is supported by the observation that impairments in synaptic plasticity can arise if mGluR signalling is imbalanced in either direction. We suggest that Drep-2 helps in establishing this balance.
Accurate information transfer between neurons governs proper brain function. At chemical synapses, communication is mediated via neurotransmitter release from specialized presynaptic intercellular contact sites, so called active zones. Their molecular composition constitutes a precisely arranged framework that sets the stage for synaptic communication.
Active zones contain a variety of proteins that deliver the speed, accuracy and plasticity inherent to neurotransmission. Though, how the molecular arrangement of these proteins influences active zone output is still ambiguous. Elucidating the nanoscopic organization of AZs has been hindered by the diffraction-limited resolution of conventional light microscopy, which is insufficient to resolve the active zone architecture on the nanometer scale. Recently, super-resolution techniques entered the field of neuroscience, which yield the capacity to bridge the gap in resolution between light and electron microscopy without losing molecular specificity. Here, localization microscopy methods are of special interest, as they can potentially deliver quantitative information about molecular distributions, even giving absolute numbers of proteins present within cellular nanodomains.
This thesis puts forward an approach based on conventional immunohistochemistry to quantify endogenous protein organizations in situ by employing direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (dSTORM). Focussing on Bruchpilot (Brp) as a major component of Drosophila active zones, the results show that the cytomatrix at the active zone is composed of units, which comprise on average ~137 Brp molecules, most of which are arranged in approximately 15 heptameric clusters. To test for a quantitative relationship between active zone ultrastructure and synaptic output, Drosophila mutants and electrophysiology were employed. The findings indicate that the precise spatial arrangement of Brp reflects properties of short-term plasticity and distinguishes distinct mechanistic causes of synaptic depression. Moreover, functional diversification could be connected to a heretofore unrecognized ultrastructural gradient along a Drosophila motor neuron.
Is behaviour response or action? In this Thesis I study this question regarding a rather simple organism, the larva of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. Despite its numerically simple brain and limited behavioural repertoire, it is nevertheless capable to accomplish surprisingly complex tasks. After association of an odour and a rewarding or punishing reinforcement signal, the learnt odour is able to retrieve the formed memory trace. However, the activated memory trace is not automatically turned into learned behaviour: Appetitive memory traces are behaviourally expressed only in absence of the rewarding tastant whereas aversive memory traces are behaviourally expressed in the presence of the punishing tastant. The ‘decision’ whether to behaviourally express a memory trace or not relies on a quantitive comparison between memory trace and current situation: only if the memory trace (after odour-sugar training) predicts a stronger sugar reward than currently present, animals show appetitive conditioned behaviour. Learned appetitive behaviour is best seen as active search for food – being pointless in the presence of (enough) food. Learned aversive behaviour, in turn, can be seen as escape from a punishment – being pointless in absence of punishment. Importantly, appetitive and aversive memory traces can be formed and retrieved independent from each other but also can, under appriate circumstances, summate to jointly organise conditioned behaviour. In contrast to learned behaviour, innate olfactory behaviour is not influenced by gustatory processing and vice versa. Thus, innate olfactory and gustatory behaviour is rather rigid and reflexive in nature, being executed almost regardless of other environmental cues. I suggest a behavioural circuit-model of chemosensory behaviour and the ‘decision’ process whether to behaviourally express a memory trace or not. This model reflects known components of the larval chemobehavioural circuit and provides clear hypotheses about the kinds of architecture to look for in the currently unknown parts of this circuit. The second chapter deals with gustatory perception and processing (especially of bitter substances). Quinine, the bitter tastant in tonic water and bitter lemon, is aversive for larvae, suppresses feeding behaviour and can act as aversive reinforcer in learning experiments. However, all three examined behaviours differ in their dose-effect dynamics, suggesting different molecular and cellular processing streams at some level. Innate choice behaviour, thought to be relatively reflexive and hard-wired, nevertheless can be influenced by the gustatory context. That is, attraction toward sweet tastants is decreased in presence of bitter tastants. The extent of this inhibitory effect depends on the concentration of both sweet and bitter tastant. Importantly, sweet tastants differ in their sensitivity to bitter interference, indicating a stimulus-specific mechanism. The molecular and cellular processes underlying the inhibitory effect of bitter tastants are unknown, but the behavioural results presented here provide a framework to further investigate interactions of gustatory processing streams.
Die Forschung auf dem Gebiet der Parkinson-Erkrankung erlebt einen großen Wandel. Eindeutig ist mittlerweile, dass es zu kurz gefasst wäre diese Erkrankung auf die motorischen Symptome zu beschränken. In den letzten Jahren wurde durch intensive Forschung bewiesen, dass der idiopathische M. Parkinson eine multisystemische Erkrankung ist, welche verschiedene Teile des Nervensystems betreffen kann. Um die zugrundeliegende Pathophysiologie und die Beteiligung des autonomen Nervensystems bei M. Parkinson näher zu untersuchen, wurden für diese Studie 30 Patienten mit idiopathischem M. Parkinson, 19 Patienten mit atypischem Parkinsonsyndrom und 30 gesunde Probanden am Universitätsklinikum Würzburg und an der Paracelsus-Elena-Klinik Kassel rekrutiert. Um Beeinträchtigungen von groß-und kleinkalibrigen Nervenfasern einschätzen zu können, wurden eine Neurografie des N. suralis sowie eine quantitativ sensorische Testung durchgeführt. Zur Bewertung einer möglichen toxischen Komponente von Levodopa gegenüber einer direkten Schädigung peripherer Nerven durch p-α-Synuclein wurden am Vitamin B12 Stoffwechsel beteiligte Proteine im Blut bestimmt. Alle Patienten und Probanden erhielten Hautbiopsien an Unterschenkel, Oberschenkel, Rücken und Finger, um anschließend eine immunhistochemische Aufarbeitung der Präparate durchführen zu können. Einerseits wurde die Beteiligung somatosensibler Nervenfasern mithilfe der Auszählung intraepidermaler Nervenfasern (PGP 9.5) bewertet. Andererseits wurden die Schweißdrüsen auf Pathologien der sympathischen Nervenfasern (VIP, TH, SP, CGRP) und der sudomotorischen Synapsen (SNCA, Synaptophysin, SNAP 25) untersucht. Weiterhin wurde versucht p-α-Synuclein, als Biomarker der Parkinson-Erkrankung, in der Haut nachzuweisen.
Positive Ergebnisse konnten hinsichtlich pathologischer Prozesse an den Synapsen erzielt werden. Es zeigte sich sowohl eine Reduktion von nativem α-Synuclein (Unterschenkel, p=0,009 und Rücken, p=0,013), Synaptophysin (Unterschenkel, p=0,007) als auch SNAP 25 (Unterschenkel, p=0,023) an den untersuchten Schweißdrüsen der Patientengruppe. Bei der Untersuchung von SNAP 25 zeigte sich des Weiteren eine negative Korrelation zwischen der SNAP 25 Dichte im Unterschenkel und p-α-Synuclein (p=0,007). Bei der Suche nach p-α-Synuclein wurden beinahe 72% der Parkinson-Patienten positiv getestet, wohingegen keiner der gesunden Probanden p-α-Synuclein in der Haut zeigte. Weiterhin konnte bei 75% der positiv getesteten Patienten mit Multisystematrophie p-α-Synuclein an somatosensiblen Nervenfasern des subepidermalen Plexus nachgewiesen werden, wohingegen es bei den M. Parkinson Patienten nur 13% waren. Die Ergebnisse der zugrundeliegenden Arbeit zeigen, dass die Hautbiopsie als frühdiagnostisches Mittel und in der Differentialdiagnose ein hohes Potenzial hat. Die Erforschung von Pathologien an Synapsen wird in der Zukunft an großer Bedeutung gewinnen und scheint ein wichtiger Ansatz, um die Pathophysiologie des M. Parkinson genauer zu verstehen. Die Hautbiopsie könnte dabei von Vorteil sein, da sich Pathologien in vivo untersuchen lassen und man nicht auf Ergebnisse von Autopsien angewiesen ist.
The synapse-associated protein of 47 kDa (Sap47) in Drosophila melanogaster is the founding member of a phylogenetically conserved protein family of hitherto unknown molecular function. Sap47 is localized throughout the entire neuropil of adult and larval brains and closely associated with glutamatergic presynaptic vesicles of larval motoneurons. Flies lacking the protein are viable and fertile and do not exhibit gross structural or marked behavioral deficiencies indicating that Sap47 is dispensable for basic synaptic function, or that its function is compensated by other related proteins.
Syap1 - the mammalian homologue of Sap47 - was reported to play an essential role in Akt1 phosphorylation in various non-neuronal cells by promoting the association of mTORC2 with Akt1 which is critical for the downstream signaling cascade for adipogenesis. The function of Syap1 in the vertebrate nervous system, however, is unknown so far.
The present study provides a first description of the subcellular localization of mouse Syap1 in cultured motoneurons as well as in selected structures of the adult mouse nervous system and reports initial functional experiments. Preceding all descriptive experiments, commercially available Syap1 antibodies were tested for their specificity and suitability for this study. One antibody raised against the human protein was found to recognize specifically both the human and murine Syap1 protein, providing an indispensable tool for biochemical, immunocytochemical and immunohistochemical studies.
In the course of this work, a Syap1 knockout mouse was established and investigated. These mice are viable and fertile and do not show obvious changes in morphology or phenotype. As observed for Sap47 in flies, Syap1 is widely distributed in the synaptic neuropil, particularly in regions rich in glutamatergic synapses but it was also detected at perinuclear Golgi-associated sites in certain groups of neuronal somata. In motoneurons the protein is especially observed in similar perinuclear structures, partially overlapping with Golgi markers and in axons, dendrites and axonal growth cones. Biochemical and immunohistochemical analyses showed widespread Syap1 expression in the central nervous system with regionally distinct distribution patterns in cerebellum, hippocampus or olfactory bulb. Besides its expression in neurons, Syap1 is also detected in non-neuronal tissue e.g. liver, kidney and muscle tissue. In contrast, non-neuronal cells in the brain lack the typical perinuclear accumulation.
First functional studies with cultured primary motoneurons on developmental, structural and functional aspects reveal no influence of Syap1 depletion on survival and morphological features such as axon length or dendritic length. Contrary to expectations, in neuronal tissues or cultured motoneurons a reduction of Akt phosphorylation at Ser473 or Thr308 was not detected after Syap1 knockdown or knockout.
For a large fraction of the proteins expressed in the human brain only the primary structure is known from the genome project. Proteins conserved in evolution can be studied in genetic models such as Drosophila. In this doctoral thesis monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) from the Wuerzburg Hybridoma library are produced and characterized with the aim to identify the target antigen. The mAb ab52 was found to be an IgM which recognized a cytosolic protein of Mr ~110 kDa on Western blots. The antigen was resolved by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2DE) as a single distinct spot. Mass spectrometric analysis of this spot revealed EPS-15 (epidermal growth factor receptor pathway substrate clone 15) to be a strong candidate. Another mAb from the library, aa2, was already found to recognize EPS-15, and comparison of the signal of both mAbs on Western blots of 1D and 2D electrophoretic separations revealed similar patterns, hence indicating that both antigens could represent the same protein. Finally absence of the wild-type signal in homozygous Eps15 mutants in a Western blot with ab52 confirmed the ab52 antigen to be EPS-15. Thus both the mAbs aa2 and ab52 recognize the Drosophila homologue of EPS-15. The mAb aa2, being an IgG, is more suitable for applications like immunoprecipitation (IP). It has already been submitted to the Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank (DSHB) to be easily available for the entire research community. The mAb na21 was also found to be an IgM. It recognizes a membrane associated antigen of Mr ~10 kDa on Western blots. Due to the membrane associated nature of the protein, it was not possible to resolve it by 2DE and due to the IgM nature of the mAb it was not possible to enrich the antigen by IP. Preliminary attempts to biochemically purify the endogenously expressed protein from the tissue, gave promising results but could not be completed due to lack of time. Thus biochemical purification of the protein seems possible in order to facilitate its identification by mass spectrometry. Several other mAbs were studied for their staining pattern on cryosections and whole mounts of Drosophila brains. However, many of these mAbs stained very few structures in the brain, which indicated that only a very limited amount of protein would be available as starting material. Because these antibodies did not produce signals on Western blots, which made it impossible to enrich the antigens by electrophoretic methods, we did not attempt their purification. However, the specific localization of these proteins makes them highly interesting and calls for their further characterization, as they may play a highly specialized role in the development and/or function of the neural circuits they are present in. The purification and identification of such low expression proteins would need novel methods of enrichment of the stained structures.
For a large fraction of the proteins expressed in the human brain only the primary
structure is known from the genome project. Proteins conserved in evolution can
be studied in genetic models such as Drosophila. In this doctoral thesis monoclonal
antibodies (mAbs) from the Wuerzburg Hybridoma library are produced and
characterized with the aim to identify the target antigen. The mAb ab52 was found
to be an IgM which recognized a cytosolic protein of Mr ~110 kDa on Western
blots. The antigen was resolved by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2DE) as a
single distinct spot. Mass spectrometric analysis of this spot revealed EPS-15
(epidermal growth factor receptor pathway substrate clone 15) to be a strong
candidate. Another mAb from the library, aa2, was already found to recognize
EPS-15, and comparison of the signal of both mAbs on Western blots of 1D and
2D electrophoretic separations revealed similar patterns, hence indicating that both
antigens could represent the same protein. Finally absence of the wild-type signal
in homozygous Eps15 mutants in a Western blot with ab52 confirmed the ab52
antigen to be EPS-15. Thus both the mAbs aa2 and ab52 recognize the Drosophila
homologue of EPS-15. The mAb aa2, being an IgG, is more suitable for
applications like immunoprecipitation (IP). It has already been submitted to the
Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank (DSHB) to be easily available for the
entire research community.
The mAb na21 was also found to be an IgM. It recognizes a membrane associated
antigen of Mr ~10 kDa on Western blots. Due to the membrane associated nature
of the protein, it was not possible to resolve it by 2DE and due to the IgM nature of
the mAb it was not possible to enrich the antigen by IP. Preliminary attempts to
biochemically purify the endogenously expressed protein from the tissue, gave
99
promising results but could not be completed due to lack of time. Thus
biochemical purification of the protein seems possible in order to facilitate its
identification by mass spectrometry. Several other mAbs were studied for their
staining pattern on cryosections and whole mounts of Drosophila brains. However,
many of these mAbs stained very few structures in the brain, which indicated that
only a very limited amount of protein would be available as starting material.
Because these antibodies did not produce signals on Western blots, which made it
impossible to enrich the antigens by electrophoretic methods, we did not attempt
their purification. However, the specific localization of these proteins makes them
highly interesting and calls for their further characterization, as they may play a
highly specialized role in the development and/or function of the neural circuits
they are present in. The purification and identification of such low expression
proteins would need novel methods of enrichment of the stained structures.