Title of article :
The Immunoglobulin Superfamily Protein SYG-1 Determines the Location of Specific Synapses in C. elegans
Author/Authors :
Kang Shen، نويسنده , , Cornelia I. Bargmann، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages :
12
From page :
619
To page :
630
Abstract :
During nervous system development, neurons form reproducible synapses onto specific targets. Here, we analyze the development of stereotyped synapses of the C. elegans HSNL neuron in vivo. Postsynaptic neurons and muscles were not required for accurate synaptic vesicle clustering in HSNL. Instead, vulval epithelial cells that contact HSNL act as synaptic guidepost cells that direct HSNL presynaptic vesicles to adjacent regions. The mutant syg-1(ky652) has defects in synapse formation that resemble those in animals that lack vulval epithelial cells: HSNL synaptic vesicles fail to accumulate at normal synaptic locations and form ectopic anterior clusters. syg-1 encodes an immunoglobulin superfamily protein that acts in the presynaptic HSNL axon. SYG-1 protein is localized to the site of future synapses, where it initiates synapse formation and localizes synaptic connections in response to the epithelial signal. SYG-1 is related to Drosophila IrreC and vertebrate NEPH1 proteins, which mediate cell-cell recognition in diverse developmental contexts.
Journal title :
CELL
Serial Year :
2003
Journal title :
CELL
Record number :
1018144
Link To Document :
بازگشت