January 15, 2016
In experiments on the fruit fly model organism Drosophila melanogaster, Heidelberg University biologists gained new insight into how feeding behaviour is encoded and controlled. The research team led by Prof. Dr. Ingrid Lohmann of the Centre for Organismal Studies (COS) studied the function of a special developmental gene of the Hox gene family. This gene is essential for maintaining a motor unit in the fly's head that consists of a muscle and the stimulating neurons that enable the fly to feed. If the function of the Hox gene was damaged or defective, the unit was not or only partially developed and the animals starved.
"Animals
interact with their environment based on stereotypical movement patterns, such as
those performed during running, breathing or feeding," explains Prof. Lohmann, who
directs the Developmental Biology research group at the Centre for Organismal
Studies. "We have known for some time that a family of regulatory genes known as Hox genes is essential for
establishing coordinated movement patterns. But until now we did not understand
the molecular underpinnings of feeding behaviour." Using Drosophila
melanogaster, Prof. Lohmann's team was able to demonstrate that a specific Hox
gene, known as Deformed, controls the establishment of the feeding motor unit
not only during the development of the embryo. It is also responsible for
maintaining its function in later phases of life, which was revealed when the
researchers deactivated Deformed after embryogenesis when the motor unit was
successfully formed. Yet the typical movement patterns were lost anyway. The
team was able to attribute the loss to major changes at the junctions, or
synapses, between the neuron and the muscle.
"Our
studies show that Hox genes have a protective function in neurons. As soon as
this protection is gone, the neurons degenerate, like we observe in
neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's," explains
Prof. Lohmann. Future studies will be devoted to elucidate how Hox genes
perform this protective function
at the molecular level. The research project was funded by the German Research
Foundation.
http://phys.org/news/2016-01-biologists-gain-insights-hox-gene.html
No comments:
Post a Comment