Representation of acoustic communication signals by insect auditory receptor neurons. (73/855)

Despite their simple auditory systems, some insect species recognize certain temporal aspects of acoustic stimuli with an acuity equal to that of vertebrates; however, the underlying neural mechanisms and coding schemes are only partially understood. In this study, we analyze the response characteristics of the peripheral auditory system of grasshoppers with special emphasis on the representation of species-specific communication signals. We use both natural calling songs and artificial random stimuli designed to focus on two low-order statistical properties of the songs: their typical time scales and the distribution of their modulation amplitudes. Based on stimulus reconstruction techniques and quantified within an information-theoretic framework, our data show that artificial stimuli with typical time scales of >40 msec can be read from single spike trains with high accuracy. Faster stimulus variations can be reconstructed only for behaviorally relevant amplitude distributions. The highest rates of information transmission (180 bits/sec) and the highest coding efficiencies (40%) are obtained for stimuli that capture both the time scales and amplitude distributions of natural songs. Use of multiple spike trains significantly improves the reconstruction of stimuli that vary on time scales <40 msec or feature amplitude distributions as occur when several grasshopper songs overlap. Signal-to-noise ratios obtained from the reconstructions of natural songs do not exceed those obtained from artificial stimuli with the same low-order statistical properties. We conclude that auditory receptor neurons are optimized to extract both the time scales and the amplitude distribution of natural songs. They are not optimized, however, to extract higher-order statistical properties of the song-specific rhythmic patterns.  (+info)

Model of transient oscillatory synchronization in the locust antennal lobe. (74/855)

Transient pairwise synchronization of locust antennal lobe (AL) projection neurons (PNs) occurs during odor responses. In a Hodgkin-Huxley-type model of the AL, interactions between excitatory PNs and inhibitory local neurons (LNs) created coherent network oscillations during odor stimulation. GABAergic interconnections between LNs led to competition among them such that different groups of LNs oscillated with periodic Ca(2+) spikes during different 50-250 ms temporal epochs, similar to those recorded in vivo. During these epochs, LN-evoked IPSPs caused phase-locked, population oscillations in sets of postsynaptic PNs. The model shows how alternations of the inhibitory drive can temporally encode sensory information in networks of neurons without precisely tuned intrinsic oscillatory properties.  (+info)

Model of cellular and network mechanisms for odor-evoked temporal patterning in the locust antennal lobe. (75/855)

Locust antennal lobe (AL) projection neurons (PNs) respond to olfactory stimuli with sequences of depolarizing and hyperpolarizing epochs, each lasting hundreds of milliseconds. A computer simulation of an AL network was used to test the hypothesis that slow inhibitory connections between local neurons (LNs) and PNs are responsible for temporal patterning. Activation of slow inhibitory receptors on PNs by the same GABAergic synapses that underlie fast oscillatory synchronization of PNs was sufficient to shape slow response modulations. This slow stimulus- and neuron-specific patterning of AL activity was resistant to blockade of fast inhibition. Fast and slow inhibitory mechanisms at synapses between LNs and PNs can thus form dynamical PN assemblies whose elements synchronize transiently and oscillate collectively, as observed not only in the locust AL, but also in the vertebrate olfactory bulb.  (+info)

A role for muscarinic excitation: control of specific singing behavior by activation of the adenylate cyclase pathway in the brain of grasshoppers. (76/855)

Muscarinic acetylcholine receptors exert slow and prolonged synaptic effects in both vertebrate and invertebrate nervous systems. Through activation of G proteins, they typically decrease intracellular cAMP levels by inhibition of adenylate cyclase or stimulate phospholipase C and the turnover of inositol phosphates. In insects, muscarinic receptors have been credited with two main functions: inhibition of transmitter release from sensory neuron terminals and regulation of the excitability of motoneurons and interneurons. Our pharmacological studies with intact and behaving grasshoppers revealed a functional role for muscarinic acetylcholine receptors as being the basis for specific arousal in defined areas of the brain, underlying the selection and control of acoustic communication behavior. Periodic injections of acetylcholine into distinct areas of the brain elicited songs of progressively increasing duration. Coinjections of the muscarinic receptor antagonist scopolamine and periodic stimulations with muscarine identified muscarinic receptor activation as being the basis for the underlying accumulation of excitation. In contrast to reports from other studies on functional circuits, muscarinic excitation was apparently mediated by activation of the adenylate cyclase pathway. Stimulation of adenylate cyclase with forskolin and of protein kinase A with 8-Br-cAMP mimicked the stimulatory effects of muscarine whereas inhibition of adenylate cyclase with SQ22536 and of protein kinase A with H-89 and Rp-cAMPs suppressed muscarine-stimulated singing behavior. Activation of adenylate cyclase by muscarinic receptors has previously been reported from studies on membrane preparations and heterologous expression systems, but a physiological significance of this pathway remained to be demonstrated in an in vivo preparation.  (+info)

Essential role of the conformational flexibility of helices 1 and 5 on the lipid binding activity of apolipophorin-III. (77/855)

It has been recently postulated that the conformational flexibility of helices 1 and 5 of Locusta migratoria apoLp-III could play an important role in early steps of binding of this apolipoprotein to a lipid surface (Soulages, J. L., and Arrese, E. L. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 17501-17509). To test this model, we have designed a double Cys mutant in which a disulfide bond linking helices 1 and 5 could be formed, resulting in an apolipoprotein with reduced conformational flexibility of its N- and C-terminal helices. Substitution of Thr(18) and Ala(147) by Cys residues provided a protein that under nonreducing conditions was fully oxidized. The far-UV CD spectra of this mutant in the reduced and oxidized states indicated that their secondary structures were identical to the structure of the wild type recombinant apoLp-III, which contains no Cys residues. Near-UV CD studies confirmed the formation of a disulfide bond and the absence of structural perturbations. The lipid binding activity of the reduced mutant, as determined by its ability to form discoidal lipoproteins, was nearly identical to that of the wild type protein. Contrarily, the disulfide form of the mutant was not able to form discoidal lipoproteins with liposomes of either dimirystoylphosphatidylcholine or dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol. It is concluded that the separation of the helices 1 and 5 constitutes one of the key steps along the complex pathway for the formation of the final apolipoprotein lipid-bound state. It is inferred that the conformational flexibility of helices 1 and 5 is a key property of apoLp-III, allowing the exposure of hydrophobic protein regions and the interaction of the hydrophobic faces of the amphipathic alpha-helices with the lipoprotein lipid surface.  (+info)

Bacterial expression and conformational analysis of a chemosensory protein from Schistocerca gregaria. (78/855)

Chemosensory proteins (CSPs) are a class of small, soluble proteins present at high concentrations in chemosensory organs of different insect species. Several pieces of evidence suggest their involvement in carrying chemical messages from the environment to chemosensory receptors. However, a structural description of the mechanism of delivery has not been reported. In order to provide the first detailed conformational characterization of these molecules, we cloned a specific isoform (CSP-sg4) from Schistocerca gregaria and expressed it in Escherichia coli. The product was obtained with yields of more than 20 mg per L of culture, all in its soluble form. The recombinant protein was identical to the native one with respect to pairing of the disulfide bridges, aggregative state and secondary structure elements. Structural investigations revealed a significantly stable polypeptide with respect to variations in temperature and acidity. CD analysis, preliminary NMR data and secondary structure prediction pointed to a correctly folded structure where helical regions and loops are alternated in a similar fashion as that observed for other classes of odorant- and pheromone-binding proteins presenting no sequence similarity to CSPs.  (+info)

Drosophila fushi tarazu. a gene on the border of homeotic function. (79/855)

BACKGROUND: Hox genes specify cell fate and regional identity during animal development. These genes are present in evolutionarily conserved clusters thought to have arisen by gene duplication and divergence. Most members of the Drosophila Hox complex (HOM-C) have homeotic functions. However, a small number of HOM-C genes, such as the segmentation gene fushi tarazu (ftz), have nonhomeotic functions. If these genes arose from a homeotic ancestor, their functional properties must have changed significantly during the evolution of modern Drosophila. RESULTS: Here, we have asked how Drosophila ftz evolved from an ancestral homeotic gene to obtain a novel function in segmentation. We expressed Ftz proteins at various developmental stages to assess their potential to regulate segmentation and to generate homeotic transformations. Drosophila Ftz protein has lost the inherent ability to mediate homeosis and functions exclusively in segmentation pathways. In contrast, Ftz from the primitive insect Tribolium (Tc-Ftz) has retained homeotic potential, generating homeotic transformations in larvae and adults and retaining the ability to repress homothorax, a hallmark of homeotic genes. Similarly, Schistocerca Ftz (Sg-Ftz) caused homeotic transformations of antenna toward leg. Primitive Ftz orthologs have moderate segmentation potential, reflected by weak interactions with the segmentation-specific cofactor Ftz-F1. Thus, Ftz orthologs represent evolutionary intermediates that have weak segmentation potential but retain the ability to act as homeotic genes. CONCLUSIONS: ftz evolved from an ancestral homeotic gene as a result of changes in both regulation of expression and specific alterations in the protein-coding region. Studies of ftz orthologs from primitive insects have provided a "snap-shot" view of the progressive evolution of a Hox protein as it took on segmentation function and lost homeotic potential. We propose that the specialization of Drosophila Ftz for segmentation resulted from loss and gain of specific domains that mediate interactions with distinct cofactors.  (+info)

Evolution of Ftz protein function in insects. (80/855)

The Drosophila gene fushi tarazu (ftz) encodes a homeodomain-containing transcriptional regulator (Ftz) required at several stages during development. Drosophila melanogaster ftz (Dm-ftz) is first expressed in seven stripes defining alternate parasegments of the embryo--a "pair-rule" segmentation function [1, 2]. It is then expressed in specific neural precursor cells in the central nervous system and finally in the developing hindgut [3]. An Orthopteran ortholog of ftz (Sg-ftz, formally Dax) has been isolated from the grasshopper Schistocerca gregaria [4]. The pattern of Sg-ftz expression in Schistocerca embryos suggests that some developmental roles of the ftz gene are likely to be conserved between these two species (e.g., CNS functions) while others may have diverged (e.g., segmentation functions). To test whether the function of the Ftz protein itself differs between these two species, here we compare the functions of Sg-Ftz and Dm-Ftz proteins by expressing both in Drosophila embryos. Sg-ftz mimics only poorly several segmentation roles of Dm-ftz (engrailed activation, wingless repression, and embryonic cuticle transformation). However, the two proteins are similarly active in the rescue of a CNS-specific ftz mutant. These findings argue that this ftz CNS function is mediated by conserved parts of the protein, while efficient pair-rule function requires sequences present specifically in the Drosophila protein.  (+info)