Taste receptor cells detect chemicals in the oral cavity and transmit this information to taste nerves, but the neurotransmitter(s) have not been identified. We report that adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) is the key neurotransmitter in this system. Genetic elimination of ionotropic purinergic receptors (P2X2 and P2X3) eliminates taste responses in the taste nerves, although the nerves remain responsive to touch, temperature, and menthol. Similarly, P2X-knockout mice show greatly reduced behavioral responses to sweeteners, glutamate, and bitter substances. Finally, stimulation of taste buds in vitro evokes release of ATP. Thus, ATP fulfils the criteria for a neurotransmitter linking taste buds to the nervous system.
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) plays important roles in the development, maintenance, and plasticity of the mammalian forebrain. These functions include regulation of neuronal maturation and survival, axonal and dendritic arborization, synaptic efficacy, and modulation of complex behaviors including depression and spatial learning. Although analysis of mutant mice has helped establish essential developmental functions for BDNF, its requirement in the adult is less well documented. We have studied late-onset forebrain-specific BDNF knockout (CaMK-BDNFKO) mice, in which BDNF is lost primarily from the cortex and hippocampus in early adulthood, well after BDNF expression has begun in these structures. We found that although CaMK-BDNFKO mice grew at a normal rate and can survive more than a year, they had smaller brains than wild type siblings. The CaMK-BDNFKO mice had generally normal behavior in tests for ataxia and anxiety, but displayed reduced spatial learning ability in the Morris water task and increased depression in the Porsolt swim test. These behavioral deficits were very similar to those we previously described in an early-onset forebrain-specific BDNF knockout. To identify an anatomical correlate of the abnormal behavior, we quantified dendritic spines in cortical neurons. The spine density of CaMK-BDNFKO mice was normal at P35, but by P84, there was a 30% reduction in spine density. The strong similarities we find between early- and late-onset BDNF knockouts suggests that BDNF signaling is required continuously in the CNS for the maintenance of some forebrain circuitry also affected by developmental BDNF depletion.
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is a secreted protein important for development and function of neocortical circuitry. Although it is well established that BDNF contributes to the sculpting of dendrite structure and modulation of synapse strength, the range and directionality of BDNF signaling underlying these functions are incompletely understood. To gain insights into the role of BDNF at the level of individual neurons, we tested the cell-autonomous requirements for Bdnf in visual cortical layer 2/3 neurons. We found that the number of functional Bdnf alleles a neuron carries relative to the prevailing genotype determines its density of dendritic spines, the structures at which most excitatory synapses are made. This requirement for Bdnf exists both during postnatal development and in adulthood, suggesting that the amount of BDNF a neuron is capable of producing determines its success in ongoing competition in the environment of the neocortex. Our results suggest that BDNF may perform a long-sought function for a secreted growth factor in mediating the competitive events that shape individual neurons and their circuits.Cre recombinase | conditional knockout
Crude protein extracts were made from kernels of 12 cultivars each of maize, sorghum and wheat. These preparations were fractionated on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)‐polyacrylamide gels and subjected to Western blot analyses. Bands corresponding to chitinases and β‐glucanases were identified immunologically (Western blots) and on activity gels. Ribosome Inactivating Protein(s) (RIP) and permatins were identified immunologically. In maize, two chitinase bands (25–29 kDa) were seen in all cultivars, and a third band of about 23 kDa was detected in 7 of the 12 cultivars. Two or three β‐glucanase bands of sizes between 24 and 36 kDa (probably a mixture of 1,3–β‐ and 1,3–1,4‐β‐glucanases) were detected in blots of SDS gels, and one band was detected in activity gels (1,3‐β‐glucanase). In sorghum, one chitnase band of approximately 29 kDa, and two or three additional bands ranging in size from 21–24 kDa were observed. Only one β‐glucanase band was identified, with an estimated molecular weight of 30 kDa. All bands that appeared on Western blots of SDS gels corresponded to bands detected on activity gels. In wheat, one chitmase band of around 20 kDa, one β‐glucanase band of about 30 kDa and one RIP band of about 30 kDa were identified. Permatins (molecular weight about 22 kDa) were identified in maize, sorghum and wheat, with the different cultivars having varying amounts of permatins.
In transgenic neurotrophin-3 lacZ-neo (NT-3(lacZneo)) mice, in which the coding region for NT-3 is replaced by Eschericia coli lacZ, the expression of beta-galactosidase faithfully mimics the expression of NT-3 (Vigers AJ, Baquet ZC, Jones KR [2000], J Comp Neurol 416:398-416). During embryonic and early postnatal development, beta-galactosidase is detected in the olfactory system, beginning at embryonic day 11.5 in the nasal epithelium and at embryonic day 16.5 in the olfactory bulb. Levels of beta-galactosidase rise with age, reaching a peak during the second postnatal week, when beta-galactosidase reactivity is visible in up to 50% of the glomeruli. As the animal matures, the beta-galactosidase levels decline, but staining remains present in axons and cell bodies of a specific subset of olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) projecting to a limited subset of glomeruli. The heavily labeled ORNs do not follow the typical OR expression zones in the epithelium but appear similar to the "patch" expression pattern of mOR37 receptors. The most heavily reactive glomeruli exhibit a striking reproducible pattern in the ventral olfactory bulb (OB). Some glomeruli of the OB contain calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-immunoreactive fibers of the trigeminal nerve. However, double-label immunocytochemistry for CGRP and beta-galactosidase rendered no correlation between trigeminal innervation and the degree of innervation by NT-3-expressing ORNs. Thus, the timing and presence of beta-galactosidase in a subset of ORNs suggests that NT-3 plays a role in synaptogenesis and/or synapse function in a specific subset of ORNs within the olfactory bulb.
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