Mathematical Biology Seminar
Villu Maricq
Department of Biology, University of Utah
Wednesday Nov. 22, 2006
3:05pm in LCB 215 Glutamate-Operated Signaling
Machines: New Insights from Genetic
Analysis
Abstract:
C. elegans explores its environment and forages for resources by
dynamically modulating its turning frequency. Cell ablation studies
and analysis of informative mutants has revealed part of the neural
circuitry that controls turning and reversals. Release of glutamate
>From sensory neurons, which are required for the avoidance of
aversive environmental stimuli and foraging behavior, activates
different types of post-synaptic glutamate receptors expressed in
interneurons. Depending on the sensory signal, glutamate release
leads to the activation of non-NMDA iGluRs, encoded by the glr-1 and
glr-2 genes, and NMDARs encoded by the nmr-1 and nmr-2 genes. Worms
with mutations that disrupt GLR-1 stability, function or synaptic
localization have defective avoidance responses. Foraging, a time and
experience dependent behavior, which may reflect more plastic changes
in synaptic strength, is also disrupted. We have used a combination
of genetic and electrophysiological studies to better understand the
development, function and plasticity of glutamatergic synapses. Our
genetic studies have revealed that GLR-1 receptors do not form stand-
alone functional channels, but rather, are part of a signaling
complex that contain at least two other proteins: SOL-1, a CUB-domain
transmembrane protein that modulates the rate of GLR-1
desensitization; and STG-1, a tetraspanning transmembrane protein
required for GLR-1 function that is related to the vertebrate
stargazin (TARP) family of proteins. A concept that has recently
emerged is that iGluRs are constantly trafficking in and out of
synapses by lateral diffusion in the plasma membrane and by cycling
between the cell surface and intracellular organelles. We are using a
variety of genetic, electrophysiological and imaging techniques to
address whether components of the GLR-1/SOL-1/STG-1 signaling complex
are independently regulated, and to determine the contributions of
receptor cycling to circuit function and behavior.
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