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- Title
A Dominant Mutation in a Neuronal Acetyicholine Receptor Subunit Leads to Motor Neuron Degeneration in Caenorhabditis elegans.
- Authors
Barbagallo, Belinda; Prescott, Hilary A.; Boyle, Patrick; Climer, Jason; Francis, Michael M.
- Abstract
Inappropriate or excessive activation of ionotropic receptors can have dramatic consequences for neuronal function and, in many instances, leads to cell death. In Caenorhabditis elegans, nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) subunits are highly expressed in a neural circuit that controls movement. Here, we show that heteromeric nAChRs containing the acr-2 subunit are diffusely localized in the processes of excitatory motor neurons and act to modulate motor neuron activity. Excessive signaling through these receptors leads to cell-autonomous degeneration of cholinergic motor neurons and paralysis. C. elegans double mutants lacking calreticulin and calnexin- two genes previously implicated in the cellular events leading to necrotic-like cell death (Xu et al. 2001)-are resistant to nAChR- mediated toxicity and possess normal numbers of motor neuron cell bodies. Nonetheless, excess nAChR activation leads to progressive destabilization of the motor neuron processes and, ultimately, paralysis in these animals. Our results provide new evidence that chronic activation of ionotropic receptors can have devastating degenerative effects in neurons and reveal that ion channel-mediated toxicity may have distinct consequences in neuronal cell bodies and processes.
- Subjects
CAENORHABDITIS elegans; ANIMAL mutation; CHOLINERGIC receptors; CELL death; MOTOR neurons; PARALYSIS; PHYSIOLOGY
- Publication
Journal of Neuroscience, 2010, Vol 30, Issue 42, p13932
- ISSN
0270-6474
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1515-10.2010