0000000001112794

AUTHOR

Carsten Duch

showing 21 related works from this author

A Systematic Nomenclature for theDrosophilaVentral Nervous System

2017

AbstractThe fruit fly,Drosophila melanogaster, is an established and powerful model system for neuroscience research with wide relevance in biology and medicine. Until recently, research on theDrosophilabrain was hindered by the lack of a complete and uniform nomenclature. Recognising this problem, the Insect Brain Name Working Group produced an authoritative hierarchical nomenclature system for the adult insect brain, usingDrosophila melanogasteras the reference framework, with other taxa considered to ensure greater consistency and expandability (Ito et al., 2014). Here, we extend this nomenclature system to the sub-gnathal regions of the adultDrosophilanervous system, thus providing a sy…

Nervous system0303 health sciencesbiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectfungiAdult insectAnatomyInsectbiology.organism_classificationNeuromere3. Good health03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineTaxonmedicine.anatomical_structuremedicineDrosophila melanogasterDrosophila (subgenus)NeuroscienceNomenclature030217 neurology & neurosurgery030304 developmental biologymedia_common
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Differential localization of voltage-gated potassium channels duringDrosophilametamorphosis

2020

Neuronal excitability is determined by the combination of different ion channels and their sub-neuronal localization. This study utilizes protein trap fly strains with endogenously tagged channels ...

0301 basic medicineQuantitative Biology::Neurons and CognitionbiologyChemistrymedia_common.quotation_subjectfungiVoltage-gated potassium channelbiology.organism_classificationTrap (computing)03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular Neuroscience030104 developmental biology0302 clinical medicinenervous systemGeneticsBiophysicsShakerDrosophila (subgenus)Metamorphosis030217 neurology & neurosurgeryIon channelDifferential (mathematics)Computer Science::Information Theorymedia_commonJournal of Neurogenetics
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Intra-neuronal Competition for Synaptic Partners Conserves the Amount of Dendritic Building Material

2017

Brain development requires correct targeting of multiple thousand synaptic terminals onto staggeringly complex dendritic arbors. The mechanisms by which input synapse numbers are matched to dendrite size, and by which synaptic inputs from different transmitter systems are correctly partitioned onto a postsynaptic arbor, are incompletely understood. By combining quantitative neuroanatomy with targeted genetic manipulation of synaptic input to an identified Drosophila neuron, we show that synaptic inputs of two different transmitter classes locally direct dendrite growth in a competitive manner. During development, the relative amounts of GABAergic and cholinergic synaptic drive shift dendrit…

0301 basic medicineDendritic spinePresynaptic TerminalsBiologyReceptors NicotinicArticleSynapse03 medical and health sciencesDendrite (crystal)Calcium Channels T-Type0302 clinical medicinePostsynaptic potentialSynaptic augmentationmedicineAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsCalcium Signalinggamma-Aminobutyric AcidNeuronsNeuronal PlasticityGeneral NeuroscienceDendritesReceptors GABA-AAcetylcholine030104 developmental biologySynaptic fatiguemedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemSynaptic plasticitySynapsesDrosophilaNeuronNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Glial expression of Swiss cheese (SWS), the Drosophila orthologue of neuropathy target esterase (NTE), is required for neuronal ensheathment and func…

2016

ABSTRACT Mutations in Drosophila Swiss cheese (SWS) or its vertebrate orthologue neuropathy target esterase (NTE), respectively, cause progressive neuronal degeneration in Drosophila and mice and a complex syndrome in humans that includes mental retardation, spastic paraplegia and blindness. SWS and NTE are widely expressed in neurons but can also be found in glia; however, their function in glia has, until now, remained unknown. We have used a knockdown approach to specifically address SWS function in glia and to probe for resulting neuronal dysfunctions. This revealed that loss of SWS in pseudocartridge glia causes the formation of multi-layered glial whorls in the lamina cortex, the firs…

Medicine (miscellaneous)lcsh:MedicineAxonal degenerationSynaptic Transmission0302 clinical medicineImmunology and Microbiology (miscellaneous)Drosophila ProteinsNeurons0303 health sciencesGene knockdownCell Deathmusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyPhototaxisAnatomyCell biologymedicine.anatomical_structureDrosophila melanogasterPhospholipasesGene Knockdown TechniquesNeurogliaNeurogliaDrosophila Proteinpsychological phenomena and processesResearch Articlelcsh:RB1-214Programmed cell deathNeuriteNeuroscience (miscellaneous)Nerve Tissue ProteinsNeuropathy target esteraseNeurotransmissionBiologyMotor ActivityGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology03 medical and health sciencesPNPLA6mental disordersNeuropilmedicineNeuriteslcsh:PathologyAnimalsPhospholipaseCell Shape030304 developmental biologySequence Homology Amino AcidSpastic paraplegialcsh:R302Reproducibility of ResultsEnsheathing gliabody regionsnervous systemVacuolesbiology.proteinCarboxylic Ester Hydrolases030217 neurology & neurosurgeryDisease Models & Mechanisms
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Dendritic and Axonal L-Type Calcium Channels Cooperate to Enhance Motoneuron Firing Output during Drosophila Larval Locomotion

2017

Behaviorally adequate neuronal firing patterns are critically dependent on the specific types of ion channel expressed and on their subcellular localization. This study combinesin situelectrophysiology with genetic and pharmacological intervention in larvalDrosophila melanogasterof both sexes to address localization and function of L-type like calcium channels in motoneurons. We demonstrate that Dmca1D (Cav1 homolog) L-type like calcium channels localize to both the somatodendritic and the axonal compartment of larval crawling motoneurons.In situpatch-clamp recordings in genetic mosaics reveal that Dmca1D channels increase burst duration and maximum intraburst firing frequencies during craw…

0301 basic medicineBK channelSodium ChannelsSK channel03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsLarge-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium ChannelsResearch ArticlesMotor NeuronsVoltage-dependent calcium channelbiologyGeneral NeuroscienceSodium channelCalcium channelfungiExcitatory Postsynaptic PotentialsAfterhyperpolarizationDendritic CellsAxonsElectrophysiological PhenomenaElectrophysiologyStretch-activated ion channel030104 developmental biologyDrosophila melanogasternervous systemLarvaSynapsesbiology.proteinCalcium ChannelsNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryLocomotion
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Temporal coherency between receptor expression, neural activity and AP-1-dependent transcription regulates Drosophila motoneuron dendrite development.

2013

Neural activity has profound effects on the development of dendritic structure. Mechanisms that link neural activity to nuclear gene expression include activity-regulated factors, such as CREB, Crest or Mef2, as well as activity-regulated immediate-early genes, such as fos and jun. This study investigates the role of the transcriptional regulator AP-1, a Fos-Jun heterodimer, in activity-dependent dendritic structure development. We combine genetic manipulation, imaging and quantitative dendritic architecture analysis in a Drosophila single neuron model, the individually identified motoneuron MN5. First, Dα7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) and AP-1 are required for normal MN5 dend…

Mef2Transcriptional ActivationEmbryo NonmammalianTime FactorsTranscription GeneticReceptor expressionReceptors NicotinicCREBSynaptic TransmissionAnimals Genetically ModifiedGenes ReporterCa2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinaseAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsCholinergic synapseCholinergic neuronMolecular BiologyResearch ArticlesCell NucleusDendritic spikeMicroscopy ConfocalbiologyGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalDendritesImmunohistochemistryCholinergic NeuronsCell biologyEnzyme ActivationTranscription Factor AP-1Drosophila melanogasterMicroscopy Fluorescencebiology.proteinSignal transductionCalcium-Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase Type 2Developmental BiologySignal TransductionDevelopment (Cambridge, England)
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Central Modulatory Neurons Control Fuel Selection in Flight Muscle of Migratory Locust

2003

Insect flight is one of the most intense and energy-demanding physiological activities. High carbohydrate oxidation rates are necessary for take-off, but, to spare the limited carbohydrate reserves, long-distance flyers, such as locusts, soon switch to lipid as the main fuel. We demonstrate that before a flight, locust muscles are metabolically poised for take-off by the release of octopamine from central modulatory dorsal unpaired median (DUM) neurons, which increases the levels of the potent glycolytic activator fructose 2,6-bisphosphate in flight muscle. Because DUM neurons innervating the flight muscles are active during rest but selectively inhibited during flight, they stimulate carbo…

Central Nervous SystemMalemedicine.medical_specialtyGrasshoppersBrief CommunicationInsect flightCarbohydrate catabolismInternal medicinemedicineFructosediphosphatesPremovement neuronal activityAnimalsGlycolysisProtein kinase AMuscle SkeletalOctopamineNeuronsbiologyGeneral NeuroscienceMigratory locustbiology.organism_classificationCyclic AMP-Dependent Protein KinasesEndocrinologyFlight AnimalOctopamine (neurotransmitter)FemaleGlycolysisLocustSignal Transduction
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Dendrites are dispensable for basic motoneuron function but essential for fine tuning of behavior.

2014

Dendrites are highly complex 3D structures that define neuronal morphology and connectivity and are the predominant sites for synaptic input. Defects in dendritic structure are highly consistent correlates of brain diseases. However, the precise consequences of dendritic structure defects for neuronal function and behavioral performance remain unknown. Here we probe dendritic function by using genetic tools to selectively abolish dendrites in identified Drosophila wing motoneurons without affecting other neuronal properties. We find that these motoneuron dendrites are unexpectedly dispensable for synaptic targeting, qualitatively normal neuronal activity patterns during behavior, and basic …

Flight altitudeMotor NeuronsDendritic spikeFine-tuningMultidisciplinaryMicroscopy ConfocalPatch-Clamp TechniquesbiologyBehavior AnimalMotor behaviorDendritesBiological Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationImmunohistochemistryStatistics NonparametricSynapseDrosophila melanogasterFlight AnimalPremovement neuronal activityAnimalsWings AnimalDrosophila melanogasterNeuroscienceFunction (biology)Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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Tyramine action on motoneuron excitability and adaptable tyramine/octopamine ratios adjust Drosophila locomotion to nutritional state

2019

Adrenergic signaling profoundly modulates animal behavior. For example, the invertebrate counterpart of norepinephrine, octopamine, and its biological precursor and functional antagonist, tyramine, adjust motor behavior to different nutritional states. In Drosophila larvae, food deprivation increases locomotor speed via octopamine-mediated structural plasticity of neuromuscular synapses, whereas tyramine reduces locomotor speed, but the underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms remain unknown. We show that tyramine is released into the CNS to reduce motoneuron intrinsic excitability and responses to excitatory cholinergic input, both by tyraminehonoka receptor activation and by downstrea…

chemistry.chemical_classificationMultidisciplinaryCalcium channelTyramineNorepinephrinechemistry.chemical_compoundmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryNeuromodulationBiogenic aminemedicineExcitatory postsynaptic potentialCholinergicOctopamine (neurotransmitter)Neurosciencemedicine.drugProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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MECP2 impairs neuronal structure by regulating KIBRA

2016

Using a Drosophila model of MECP2 gain-of-function, we identified memory associated KIBRA as a target of MECP2 in regulating dendritic growth. We found that expression of human MECP2 increased kibra expression in Drosophila, and targeted RNAi knockdown of kibra in identified neurons fully rescued dendritic defects as induced by MECP2 gain-of-function. Validation in mouse confirmed that Kibra is similarly regulated by Mecp2 in a mammalian system. We found that Mecp2 gain-of-function in cultured mouse cortical neurons caused dendritic impairments and increased Kibra levels. Accordingly, Mecp2 loss-of-function in vivo led to decreased Kibra levels in hippocampus, cortex, and cerebellum. Togeth…

0301 basic medicinecongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesCerebellumMethyl-CpG-Binding Protein 2Dendritic morphologyHippocampusDisease modelsHippocampusArticlelcsh:RC321-571MECP2Mice03 medical and health sciencesMemoryRNA interferencemental disordersmedicineAnimalsHumanslcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryCerebral CortexNeuronsGene knockdownMECP2 duplication syndromebiologybiology.organism_classificationMECP2nervous system diseasesCortex (botany)Disease Models AnimalDrosophila melanogaster030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyCerebral cortexDrosophilaDrosophila melanogasterNeuroscienceNeurobiology of Disease
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A Systematic Nomenclature for the Drosophila Ventral Nerve Cord.

2020

Drosophila melanogaster is an established model for neuroscience research with relevance in biology and medicine. Until recently, research on the Drosophila brain was hindered by the lack of a complete and uniform nomenclature. Recognizing this, Ito et al. (2014) produced an authoritative nomenclature for the adult insect brain, using Drosophila as the reference. Here, we extend this nomenclature to the adult thoracic and abdominal neuromeres, the ventral nerve cord (VNC), to provide an anatomical description of this major component of the Drosophila nervous system. The VNC is the locus for the reception and integration of sensory information and involved in generating most of the locomotor…

0301 basic medicineNervous systemanatomytectulumanimal structures1.1 Normal biological development and functioningneuropilSensory systemhemilineageArticle03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineTerminology as TopicmedicineNeuropilPsychologyAnimalsCell LineageInvertebrateontologyNomenclatureNeuronsNeurology & NeurosurgerybiologyGeneral NeurosciencefungiNeurosciencesCommissuremotorneuronbiology.organism_classificationNeuromeretractGanglia Invertebrate030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureDrosophila melanogasterVentral nerve cordNeurologicalGangliacommissureinsectCognitive SciencesDrosophila melanogasterNerve NetNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryneuromereNeuron
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Transient BK outward current enhances motoneurone firing rates duringDrosophilalarval locomotion

2015

Key points We combine in situ electrophysiology with genetic manipulation in Drosophila larvae aiming to investigate the role of fast calcium-activated potassium currents for motoneurone firing patterns during locomotion. We first demonstrate that slowpoke channels underlie fast calcium-activated potassium currents in these motoneurones. By conducting recordings in semi-intact animals that produce crawling-like movements, we show that slowpoke channels are required specifically in motoneurones for maximum firing rates during locomotion. Such enhancement of maximum firing rates occurs because slowpoke channels prevent depolarization block by limiting the amplitude of motoneurone depolarizati…

BurstingElectrophysiologynervous systemPhysiologySodium channelContext (language use)AfterhyperpolarizationDepolarizationPatch clampBiologyNeuroscienceIon channelThe Journal of Physiology
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Quantitative Geometric Three-Dimensional Reconstruction of Neuronal Architecture and Mapping of Labeled Proteins from Confocal Image Stacks

2014

Computer sciencebusiness.industryConfocalComputer visionArtificial intelligenceArchitecturebusinessImage (mathematics)
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Tyramine Actions on Drosophila Flight Behavior Are Affected by a Glial Dehydrogenase/Reductase

2017

The biogenic amines octopamine (OA) and tyramine (TA) modulate insect motor behavior in an antagonistic manner. OA generally enhances locomotor behaviors such as Drosophila larval crawling and flight, whereas TA decreases locomotor activity. However, the mechanisms and cellular targets of TA modulation of locomotor activity are incompletely understood. This study combines immunocytochemistry, genetics and flight behavioral assays in the Drosophila model system to test the role of a candidate enzyme for TA catabolism, named Nazgul (Naz), in flight motor behavioral control. We hypothesize that the dehydrogenase/reductase Naz represents a critical step in TA catabolism. Immunocytochemistry rev…

gliaCognitive NeuroscienceNeuroscience (miscellaneous)tyraminelcsh:RC321-571570 Life sciencesflightmodulationCellular and Molecular Neurosciencebiogenic amineDevelopmental NeuroscienceDrosophilalcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry570 BiowissenschaftenFrontiers in Systems Neuroscience
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Apoptotic Activity of MeCP2 Is Enhanced by C-Terminal Truncating Mutations.

2016

Methyl-CpG binding protein 2 (MeCP2) is a widely abundant, multifunctional protein most highly expressed in post-mitotic neurons. Mutations causing Rett syndrome and related neurodevelopmental disorders have been identified along the entire MECP2 locus, but symptoms vary depending on mutation type and location. C-terminal mutations are prevalent, but little is known about the function of the MeCP2 C-terminus. We employ the genetic efficiency of Drosophila to provide evidence that expression of p.Arg294* (more commonly identified as R294X), a human MECP2 E2 mutant allele causing truncation of the C-terminal domains, promotes apoptosis of identified neurons in vivo. We confirm this novel find…

0301 basic medicineMethyl-CpG-Binding Protein 2lcsh:MedicineApoptosisBiochemistryPhosphoserine0302 clinical medicineAnimal CellsDrosophila ProteinsPost-Translational ModificationPhosphorylationlcsh:ScienceNeuronsMotor NeuronsGeneticsMultidisciplinaryCell DeathbiologyDrosophila MelanogasterAnimal ModelsInsectsFOXG1Cell ProcessesCaspasesPhosphorylationDrosophilaBiological CulturesCellular TypesDrosophila melanogasterResearch ArticleGene isoformcongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesArthropodaProtein domainMouse ModelsMotor ActivityResearch and Analysis MethodsTransfectionModels BiologicalMECP203 medical and health sciencesModel OrganismsProtein Domainsmental disordersAnimalsHumansMolecular Biology TechniquesImmunohistochemistry TechniquesMolecular BiologyTranscription factorBinding proteinlcsh:ROrganismsBiology and Life SciencesProteinsCell BiologyCell Culturesbiology.organism_classificationInvertebratesHistochemistry and Cytochemistry TechniquesHEK293 Cells030104 developmental biologyCellular NeuroscienceMutationImmunologic TechniquesMutant Proteinslcsh:Q030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscienceTranscription FactorsPLoS ONE
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Postnatal increases in axonal conduction velocity of an identified Drosophila interneuron require fast sodium, L-type calcium and shaker potassium ch…

2019

Abstract During early postnatal life, speed up of signal propagation through many central and peripheral neurons has been associated with an increase in axon diameter or/and myelination. Especially in unmyelinated axons postnatal adjustments of axonal membrane conductances is potentially a third mechanism but solid evidence is lacking. Here, we show that axonal action potential (AP) conduction velocity in the Drosophila giant fiber (GF) interneuron, which is required for fast long-distance signal conduction through the escape circuit, is increased by 80% during the first day of adult life. Genetic manipulations indicate that this postnatal increase in AP conduction velocity in the unmyelina…

MaleConfirmationaction potential propagationCalcium Channels L-Typepostnatal maturation2Neural ConductionAction PotentialsVoltage-Gated Sodium ChannelsDevelopmentgiant fiberAxonsvoltage-gated ion channels570 Life sciencesnervous systemInterneurons2.6LarvaShaker Superfamily of Potassium ChannelsAnimalsescapeinsectDrosophilaFemale570 Biowissenschaften
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Dscam1 Is Required for Normal Dendrite Growth and Branching But Not for Dendritic Spacing in Drosophila Motoneurons

2014

Down syndrome cell adhesion molecule, Dscam, serves diverse neurodevelopmental functions, including axon guidance and synaptic adhesion, as well as self-recognition and self-avoidance, depending on the neuron type, brain region, or species under investigation. InDrosophila, the extensive molecular diversity that results from alternative splicing of Dscam1 into >38,000 isoforms provides neurons with a unique molecular code for self-recognition in the nervous system. Each neuron produces only a small subset of Dscam1 isoforms, and distinct Dscam1 isoforms mediate homophilic interactions, which in turn, result in repulsion and even spacing of self-processes, while allowing contact with neig…

Nervous systemGreen Fluorescent ProteinsMuscle Fibers SkeletalBiologyAnimals Genetically ModifiedDSCAMDendrite (crystal)medicineAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsProtein IsoformsMotor NeuronsAnalysis of VarianceGeneral NeuroscienceMARCMfungiGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalArticlesDendritesAlternative Splicingmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemMushroom bodiesAxon guidanceDrosophilaRNA InterferenceNeuronNeuroscienceCell Adhesion MoleculesDrosophila Protein
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Putative excitatory and putative inhibitory inputs are localised in different dendritic domains in aDrosophilaflight motoneuron

2012

Input-output computations of individual neurons may be affected by the three-dimensional structure of their dendrites and by the targeting of input synapses to specific parts of their dendrites. However, only few examples exist where dendritic architecture can be related to behaviorally relevant computations of a neuron. By combining genetic, immunohistochemical, and confocal laser scanning methods this study estimates the location of the spike initiating zone and the dendritic distribution patterns of putative synaptic inputs on an individually identified Drosophila flight motorneuron, MN5. MN5 is a monopolar neuron with more than 4000 dendritic branches. The site of spike initiation was e…

Motor NeuronsDendritic spikeGABAA receptorGeneral NeuroscienceAction PotentialsDendritesVoltage-Gated Sodium ChannelsReceptors NicotinicBiologyReceptors GABA-AInhibitory postsynaptic potentialArticleTonic (physiology)SynapseProtein TransportDrosophila melanogastermedicine.anatomical_structureSynapsesmedicineExcitatory postsynaptic potentialAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsGABAergicNeuronNeuroscienceEuropean Journal of Neuroscience
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Separation of presynaptic Cav2 and Cav1 channel function in synaptic vesicle exo- and endocytosis by the membrane anchored Ca2+ pump PMCA

2021

Significance Synaptic vesicle (SV) release from presynaptic terminals requires nanometer precise control of action potential (AP)–triggered calcium influx through voltage-gated calcium channels (VGCCs). SV recycling also depends on calcium signals, though in different spatiotemporal domains. Mechanisms for separate control of SV release and recycling by AP-triggered calcium influx remain elusive. Here, we demonstrate largely independent regulation of release and recycling by two different populations of VGCCs (Cav2, Cav1), identify Cav1 as one of potentially multiple calcium entry routes for endocytosis regulation, and show functional separation of simultaneous calcium signals in the nanome…

Drosophila ; Dmca1D ; cacophony ; PMCA ; synapse0301 basic medicine570ATPasecacophonyPresynaptic TerminalsAction PotentialsEndocytosisDmca1DSynaptic vesicleExocytosis03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundGlutamatergicPlasma Membrane Calcium-Transporting ATPases0302 clinical medicinePMCAsynapsemedicineAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsAxonNeurotransmitterProbabilityMotor NeuronsMultidisciplinaryVoltage-dependent calcium channelbiologyCell Membrane424500 Naturwissenschaften und Mathematik::570 Biowissenschaften; Biologie::570 Biowissenschaften; BiologieBiological SciencesEndocytosisCell biologyElectrophysiology030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureDrosophila melanogasterchemistryReceptors Glutamatebiology.proteinDrosophilaCalciumCalcium ChannelsSynaptic Vesicles030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscienceProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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Sequential acquisition of cacophony calcium currents, sodium channels and voltage-dependent potassium currents affects spike shape and dendrite growt…

2014

During metamorphosis the CNS undergoes profound changes to accommodate the switch from larval to adult behaviors. In Drosophila and other holometabolous insects, adult neurons differentiate either from respecified larval neurons, newly born neurons, or are born embryonically but remain developmentally arrested until differentiation during pupal life. This study addresses the latter in the identified Drosophila flight motoneuron 5. In situ patch-clamp recordings, intracellular dye fills and immunocytochemistry address the interplay between dendritic shape, excitability and ionic current development. During pupal life, changes in excitability and spike shape correspond to a stereotyped, progr…

Patch-Clamp Techniquesmedia_common.quotation_subjectAction Potentialschemistry.chemical_elementCell EnlargementBiologyCalciumSodium ChannelsArticleMembrane PotentialsAnimalsPatch clampMetamorphosisIon channelmedia_commonMotor NeuronsMembrane potentialMicroscopy ConfocalGeneral NeuroscienceSodium channelOptical ImagingfungiMetamorphosis BiologicalDendritesImmunohistochemistryPotassium channelCell biologyDrosophila melanogasterchemistryPotassium Channels Voltage-GatedPotassiumCalciumNeuroscienceIntracellularEuropean Journal of Neuroscience
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A Systematic Nomenclature for the <i>Drosophila</i> Ventral Nervous System

2020

The fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, is an established and powerful model system for neuroscience research with wide relevance in biology and medicine. Until recently, research on the Drosophila brain was hindered by the lack of a complete and uniform nomenclature. Recognising this problem, the Insect Brain Name Working Group produced an authoritative hierarchical nomenclature system for the adult insect brain, using Drosophila melanogaster as the reference framework, with other taxa considered to ensure greater consistency and expandability (Ito et al., 2014). Here, we extend this nomenclature system to the sub-gnathal regions of the adult Drosophila nervous system, thus providing a sys…

Nervous systemConnectomicsbiologyfungiNeuromerebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.anatomical_structureTaxonmedicineNeuropilNomenclatureDrosophilaNeuroscienceNeuroanatomySSRN Electronic Journal
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