1. Terminal Glial Differentiation Involves Regulated Expression of the Excitatory Amino Acid Transporters in the Drosophila Embryonic CNS
- Author
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Marie-Thérèse Besson, Laurent Soustelle, Serge Birman, and Thomas Rival
- Subjects
Nervous system ,Central Nervous System ,Cellular differentiation ,Excitatory Amino Acids ,Central nervous system ,Biology ,Neuroblast ,medicine ,Animals ,Drosophila Proteins ,RNA, Messenger ,Molecular Biology ,In Situ Hybridization ,Regulation of gene expression ,Homeodomain Proteins ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Neuropeptides ,Colocalization ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,Cell Differentiation ,Cell Biology ,Embryonic stem cell ,Cell biology ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Excitatory Amino Acid Transporter 1 ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Biochemistry ,Excitatory Amino Acid Transporter 2 ,Trans-Activators ,Ectopic expression ,Drosophila ,Neuroglia ,Transcription Factors ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
The Drosophila excitatory amino acid transporters dEAAT1 and dEAAT2 are nervous-specific transmembrane proteins that mediate the high affinity uptake of L-glutamate or aspartate into cells. Here, we demonstrate by colocalization studies that both genes are expressed in discrete and partially overlapping subsets of differentiated glia and not in neurons in the embryonic central nervous system (CNS). We show that expression of these transporters is disrupted in mutant embryos deficient for the glial fate genes glial cells missing (gcm) and reversed polarity (repo). Conversely, ectopic expression of gcm in neuroblasts, which forces all nerve cells to adopt a glial fate, induces an ubiquitous expression of both EAAT genes in the nervous system. We also detected the dEAAT transcripts in the midline glia in late embryos and dEAAT2 in a few peripheral neurons in head sensory organs. Our results show that glia play a major role in excitatory amino acid transport in the Drosophila CNS and that regulated expression of the dEAAT genes contributes to generate the functional diversity of glial cells during embryonic development.
- Published
- 2002
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