the batten disease palmitoyl protein thioesterase 1 gene regulates neural specification and axon connectivity during drosophila embryonic development板条疾病蛋白质棕榈酰thioesterase 1基因调节神经规范和轴突连接在果蝇胚胎发育.pdf
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The Batten Disease Palmitoyl Protein Thioesterase 1
Gene Regulates Neural Specification and Axon
Connectivity during Drosophila Embryonic Development
Quynh Chu-LaGraff*, Cassandra Blanchette¤a, Patrick O’Hern, Cassandra Denefrio¤b
Department of Biology, Union College, Schenectady, New York, United States of America
Abstract
Palmitoyl Protein Thioesterase 1 (PPT1) is an essential lysosomal protein in the mammalian nervous system whereby defects
result in a fatal pediatric disease called Infantile Neuronal Ceroids Lipofuscinosis (INCL). Flies bearing mutations in the
Drosophila ortholog Ppt1 exhibit phenotypes similar to the human disease: accumulation of autofluorescence deposits and
shortened adult lifespan. Since INCL patients die as young children, early developmental neural defects due to the loss of
PPT1 are postulated but have yet to be elucidated. Here we show that Drosophila Ppt1 is required during embryonic neural
development. Ppt1 embryos display numerous neural defects ranging from abnormal cell fate specification in a number of
identified precursor lineages in the CNS, missing and disorganized neurons, faulty motoneuronal axon trajectory, and
discontinuous, misaligned, and incorrect midline crossings of the longitudinal axon bundles of the ventral nerve cord.
Defects in the PNS include a decreased number of sensory neurons, disorganized chordotonal neural clusters, and
abnormally shaped neurons with aberrant dendritic projections. These results indicate that Ppt1 is essential for proper
neuronal cell fates and organization; and to establish the local environment for proper axon guidance and fasciculation.
Ppt1 function is well conserved from humans to flies; thus the INCL pathologies may be due, in part, to the accumulation of
various embryonic neural defects similar
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