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1.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 4154, 2024 May 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38755205

RESUMEN

The precise neural mechanisms within the brain that contribute to the remarkable lifetime persistence of memory are not fully understood. Two-photon calcium imaging allows the activity of individual cells to be followed across long periods, but conventional approaches require head-fixation, which limits the type of behavior that can be studied. We present a magnetic voluntary head-fixation system that provides stable optical access to the brain during complex behavior. Compared to previous systems that used mechanical restraint, there are no moving parts and animals can engage and disengage entirely at will. This system is failsafe, easy for animals to use and reliable enough to allow long-term experiments to be routinely performed. Animals completed hundreds of trials per session of an odor discrimination task that required 2-4 s fixations. Together with a reflectance fluorescence collection scheme that increases two-photon signal and a transgenic Thy1-GCaMP6f rat line, we are able to reliably image the cellular activity in the hippocampus during behavior over long periods (median 6 months), allowing us track the same neurons over a large fraction of animals' lives (up to 19 months).


Asunto(s)
Hipocampo , Neuronas , Ratas Transgénicas , Animales , Hipocampo/citología , Neuronas/metabolismo , Ratas , Masculino , Calcio/metabolismo , Cabeza/diagnóstico por imagen , Magnetismo , Odorantes/análisis , Femenino
2.
Neuron ; 111(22): 3541-3553.e8, 2023 11 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37657441

RESUMEN

Dopamine neurons of the ventral tegmental area (VTADA) respond to food and social stimuli and contribute to both forms of motivation. However, it is unclear whether the same or different VTADA neurons encode these different stimuli. To address this question, we performed two-photon calcium imaging in mice presented with food and conspecifics and found statistically significant overlap in the populations responsive to both stimuli. Both hunger and opposite-sex social experience further increased the proportion of neurons that respond to both stimuli, implying that increasing motivation for one stimulus increases overlap. In addition, single-nucleus RNA sequencing revealed significant co-expression of feeding- and social-hormone-related genes in individual VTADA neurons. Taken together, our functional and transcriptional data suggest overlapping VTADA populations underlie food and social motivation.


Asunto(s)
Neuronas Dopaminérgicas , Área Tegmental Ventral , Ratones , Animales , Neuronas Dopaminérgicas/fisiología , Alimentos , Motivación
4.
bioRxiv ; 2023 May 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37293057

RESUMEN

Dopamine neurons of the ventral tegmental area (VTA DA ) respond to food and social stimuli and contribute to both forms of motivation. However, it is unclear if the same or different VTA DA neurons encode these different stimuli. To address this question, we performed 2-photon calcium imaging in mice presented with food and conspecifics, and found statistically significant overlap in the populations responsive to both stimuli. Both hunger and opposite-sex social experience further increased the proportion of neurons that respond to both stimuli, implying that modifying motivation for one stimulus affects responses to both stimuli. In addition, single-nucleus RNA sequencing revealed significant co-expression of feeding- and social-hormone related genes in individual VTA DA neurons. Taken together, our functional and transcriptional data suggest overlapping VTA DA populations underlie food and social motivation.

5.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Jun 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37333105

RESUMEN

Quantitative comparison of brain-wide neural dynamics across different experimental conditions often requires precise alignment to a common set of anatomical coordinates. While such approaches are routinely applied in functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), registering in vivo fluorescence imaging data to ex vivo-derived reference atlases is challenging, given the many differences in imaging modality, microscope specification, and sample preparation. Moreover, in many systems, animal to animal variation in brain structure limits registration precision. Using the highly stereotyped architecture of the fruit fly brain as a model, we overcome these challenges by building a reference atlas based directly on in vivo multiphoton-imaged brains, called the Functional Drosophila Atlas (FDA). We then develop a novel two-step pipeline, BrIdge For Registering Over Statistical Templates (BIFROST), for transforming neural imaging data into this common space, and for importing ex vivo resources, such as connectomes. Using genetically labeled cell types to provide ground truth, we demonstrate that this method allows voxel registration with micron precision. Thus, this method provides a generalizable pipeline for registering neural activity datasets to one another, allowing quantitative comparisons across experiments, microscopes, genotypes, and anatomical atlases, including connectomes.

7.
Nature ; 605(7911): 706-712, 2022 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35508661

RESUMEN

A globally invasive form of the mosquito Aedes aegypti specializes in biting humans, making it an efficient disease vector1. Host-seeking female mosquitoes strongly prefer human odour over the odour of animals2,3, but exactly how they distinguish between the two is not known. Vertebrate odours are complex blends of volatile chemicals with many shared components4-7, making discrimination an interesting sensory coding challenge. Here we show that human and animal odours evoke activity in distinct combinations of olfactory glomeruli within the Ae. aegypti antennal lobe. One glomerulus in particular is strongly activated by human odour but responds weakly, or not at all, to animal odour. This human-sensitive glomerulus is selectively tuned to the long-chain aldehydes decanal and undecanal, which we show are consistently enriched in human odour and which probably originate from unique human skin lipids. Using synthetic blends, we further demonstrate that signalling in the human-sensitive glomerulus significantly enhances long-range host-seeking behaviour in a wind tunnel, recapitulating preference for human over animal odours. Our research suggests that animal brains may distil complex odour stimuli of innate biological relevance into simple neural codes and reveals targets for the design of next-generation mosquito-control strategies.


Asunto(s)
Aedes , Encéfalo , Conducta de Búsqueda de Hospedador , Odorantes , Aedes/fisiología , Animales , Encéfalo/fisiología , Femenino , Humanos , Control de Mosquitos , Mosquitos Vectores/fisiología
8.
Neuron ; 110(2): 328-349.e11, 2022 01 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34776042

RESUMEN

Recent work has highlighted that many types of variables are represented in each neocortical area. How can these many neural representations be organized together without interference and coherently maintained/updated through time? We recorded from excitatory neural populations in posterior cortices as mice performed a complex, dynamic task involving multiple interrelated variables. The neural encoding implied that highly correlated task variables were represented by less-correlated neural population modes, while pairs of neurons exhibited a spectrum of signal correlations. This finding relates to principles of efficient coding, but notably utilizes neural population modes as the encoding unit and suggests partial whitening of task-specific information where different variables are represented with different signal-to-noise levels. Remarkably, this encoding function was multiplexed with sequential neural dynamics yet reliably followed changes in task-variable correlations throughout the trial. We suggest that neural circuits can implement time-dependent encodings in a simple way using random sequential dynamics as a temporal scaffold.


Asunto(s)
Neuronas , Animales , Ratones , Neuronas/fisiología
9.
Nat Neurosci ; 24(1): 93-104, 2021 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33230320

RESUMEN

Sensory pathways are typically studied by starting at receptor neurons and following postsynaptic neurons into the brain. However, this leads to a bias in analyses of activity toward the earliest layers of processing. Here, we present new methods for volumetric neural imaging with precise across-brain registration to characterize auditory activity throughout the entire central brain of Drosophila and make comparisons across trials, individuals and sexes. We discover that auditory activity is present in most central brain regions and in neurons responsive to other modalities. Auditory responses are temporally diverse, but the majority of activity is tuned to courtship song features. Auditory responses are stereotyped across trials and animals in early mechanosensory regions, becoming more variable at higher layers of the putative pathway, and this variability is largely independent of ongoing movements. This study highlights the power of using an unbiased, brain-wide approach for mapping the functional organization of sensory activity.


Asunto(s)
Encéfalo/fisiología , Drosophila melanogaster/fisiología , Audición/fisiología , Estimulación Acústica , Animales , Vías Auditivas/fisiología , Conducta Animal , Mapeo Encefálico , Conectoma , Cortejo , Femenino , Masculino , Mecanorreceptores/fisiología , Actividad Motora , Conducta Sexual Animal , Vocalización Animal
10.
Elife ; 92020 12 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33263278

RESUMEN

How does the brain internally represent a sequence of sensory information that jointly drives a decision-making behavior? Studies of perceptual decision-making have often assumed that sensory cortices provide noisy but otherwise veridical sensory inputs to downstream processes that accumulate and drive decisions. However, sensory processing in even the earliest sensory cortices can be systematically modified by various external and internal contexts. We recorded from neuronal populations across posterior cortex as mice performed a navigational decision-making task based on accumulating randomly timed pulses of visual evidence. Even in V1, only a small fraction of active neurons had sensory-like responses time-locked to each pulse. Here, we focus on how these 'cue-locked' neurons exhibited a variety of amplitude modulations from sensory to cognitive, notably by choice and accumulated evidence. These task-related modulations affected a large fraction of cue-locked neurons across posterior cortex, suggesting that future models of behavior should account for such influences.


Asunto(s)
Conducta de Elección/fisiología , Lóbulo Parietal/fisiología , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Animales , Conducta Animal/fisiología , Corteza Cerebral/fisiología , Toma de Decisiones/fisiología , Discriminación en Psicología/fisiología , Masculino , Ratones , Neuronas/fisiología
11.
Curr Biol ; 29(19): 3200-3215.e5, 2019 10 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31564492

RESUMEN

Males and females often produce distinct responses to the same sensory stimuli. How such differences arise-at the level of sensory processing or in the circuits that generate behavior-remains largely unresolved across sensory modalities. We address this issue in the acoustic communication system of Drosophila. During courtship, males generate time-varying songs, and each sex responds with specific behaviors. We characterize male and female behavioral tuning for all aspects of song and show that feature tuning is similar between sexes, suggesting sex-shared song detectors drive divergent behaviors. We then identify higher-order neurons in the Drosophila brain, called pC2, that are tuned for multiple temporal aspects of one mode of the male's song and drive sex-specific behaviors. We thus uncover neurons that are specifically tuned to an acoustic communication signal and that reside at the sensory-motor interface, flexibly linking auditory perception with sex-specific behavioral responses.


Asunto(s)
Percepción Auditiva/fisiología , Encéfalo/fisiología , Drosophila melanogaster/fisiología , Neuronas/fisiología , Conducta Sexual Animal/fisiología , Animales , Cortejo , Femenino , Masculino , Caracteres Sexuales
12.
Neuron ; 104(4): 810-824.e9, 2019 11 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31564591

RESUMEN

Neural activity throughout the cortex is correlated with perceptual decisions, but inactivation studies suggest that only a small number of areas are necessary for these behaviors. Here we show that the number of required cortical areas and their dynamics vary across related tasks with different cognitive computations. In a visually guided virtual T-maze task, bilateral inactivation of only a few dorsal cortical regions impaired performance. In contrast, in tasks requiring evidence accumulation and/or post-stimulus memory, performance was impaired by inactivation of widespread cortical areas with diverse patterns of behavioral deficits across areas and tasks. Wide-field imaging revealed widespread ramps of Ca2+ activity during the accumulation and visually guided tasks. Additionally, during accumulation, different regions had more diverse activity profiles, leading to reduced inter-area correlations. Using a modular recurrent neural network model trained to perform analogous tasks, we argue that differences in computational strategies alone could explain these findings.


Asunto(s)
Corteza Cerebral/fisiología , Toma de Decisiones/fisiología , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Animales , Femenino , Masculino , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos C57BL
13.
Nature ; 570(7762): 509-513, 2019 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31142844

RESUMEN

There is increased appreciation that dopamine neurons in the midbrain respond not only to reward1 and reward-predicting cues1,2, but also to other variables such as the distance to reward3, movements4-9 and behavioural choices10,11. An important question is how the responses to these diverse variables are organized across the population of dopamine neurons. Whether individual dopamine neurons multiplex several variables, or whether there are subsets of neurons that are specialized in encoding specific behavioural variables remains unclear. This fundamental question has been difficult to resolve because recordings from large populations of individual dopamine neurons have not been performed in a behavioural task with sufficient complexity to examine these diverse variables simultaneously. Here, to address this gap, we used two-photon calcium imaging through an implanted lens to record the activity of more than 300 dopamine neurons from the ventral tegmental area of the mouse midbrain during a complex decision-making task. As mice navigated in a virtual-reality environment, dopamine neurons encoded an array of sensory, motor and cognitive variables. These responses were functionally clustered, such that subpopulations of neurons transmitted information about a subset of behavioural variables, in addition to encoding reward. These functional clusters were spatially organized, with neighbouring neurons more likely to be part of the same cluster. Together with the topography between dopamine neurons and their projections, this specialization and anatomical organization may aid downstream circuits in correctly interpreting the wide range of signals transmitted by dopamine neurons.


Asunto(s)
Cognición , Neuronas Dopaminérgicas/fisiología , Actividad Motora , Sensación , Área Tegmental Ventral/citología , Animales , Fenómenos Biomecánicos , Calcio/metabolismo , Condicionamiento Clásico , Señales (Psicología) , Toma de Decisiones , Femenino , Masculino , Ratones , Recompensa , Navegación Espacial , Área Tegmental Ventral/fisiología , Realidad Virtual
14.
Neuron ; 100(5): 1045-1058.e5, 2018 12 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30482694

RESUMEN

Widefield imaging of calcium dynamics is an emerging method for mapping regional neural activity but is currently limited to restrained animals. Here we describe cScope, a head-mounted widefield macroscope developed to image large-scale cortical dynamics in rats during natural behavior. cScope provides a 7.8 × 4 mm field of view and dual illumination paths for both fluorescence and hemodynamic correction and can be fabricated at low cost using readily attainable components. We also report the development of Thy-1 transgenic rat strains with widespread neuronal expression of the calcium indicator GCaMP6f. We combined these two technologies to image large-scale calcium dynamics in the dorsal neocortex during a visual evidence accumulation task. Quantitative analysis of task-related dynamics revealed multiple regions having neural signals that encode behavioral choice and sensory evidence. Our results provide a new transgenic resource for calcium imaging in rats and extend the domain of head-mounted microscopes to larger-scale cortical dynamics. VIDEO ABSTRACT.


Asunto(s)
Señalización del Calcio , Microscopía/métodos , Neocórtex/fisiología , Neuronas/fisiología , Imagen Óptica/métodos , Animales , Conducta Animal , Calcio/análisis , Electrofisiología/instrumentación , Electrofisiología/métodos , Femenino , Proteínas Luminiscentes/genética , Masculino , Microscopía/instrumentación , Imagen Óptica/instrumentación , Ratas Transgénicas
15.
Front Behav Neurosci ; 12: 36, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29559900

RESUMEN

The gradual accumulation of sensory evidence is a crucial component of perceptual decision making, but its neural mechanisms are still poorly understood. Given the wide availability of genetic and optical tools for mice, they can be useful model organisms for the study of these phenomena; however, behavioral tools are largely lacking. Here, we describe a new evidence-accumulation task for head-fixed mice navigating in a virtual reality (VR) environment. As they navigate down the stem of a virtual T-maze, they see brief pulses of visual evidence on either side, and retrieve a reward on the arm with the highest number of pulses. The pulses occur randomly with Poisson statistics, yielding a diverse yet well-controlled stimulus set, making the data conducive to a variety of computational approaches. A large number of mice of different genotypes were able to learn and consistently perform the task, at levels similar to rats in analogous tasks. They are sensitive to side differences of a single pulse, and their memory of the cues is stable over time. Moreover, using non-parametric as well as modeling approaches, we show that the mice indeed accumulate evidence: they use multiple pulses of evidence from throughout the cue region of the maze to make their decision, albeit with a small overweighting of earlier cues, and their performance is affected by the magnitude but not the duration of evidence. Additionally, analysis of the mice's running patterns revealed that trajectories are fairly stereotyped yet modulated by the amount of sensory evidence, suggesting that the navigational component of this task may provide a continuous readout correlated to the underlying cognitive variables. Our task, which can be readily integrated with state-of-the-art techniques, is thus a valuable tool to study the circuit mechanisms and dynamics underlying perceptual decision making, particularly under more complex behavioral contexts.

16.
Nat Methods ; 14(4): 420-426, 2017 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28319111

RESUMEN

Two-photon laser scanning microscopy of calcium dynamics using fluorescent indicators is a widely used imaging method for large-scale recording of neural activity in vivo. Here, we introduce volumetric two-photon imaging of neurons using stereoscopy (vTwINS), a volumetric calcium imaging method that uses an elongated, V-shaped point spread function to image a 3D brain volume. Single neurons project to spatially displaced 'image pairs' in the resulting 2D image, and the separation distance between projections is proportional to depth in the volume. To demix the fluorescence time series of individual neurons, we introduce a modified orthogonal matching pursuit algorithm that also infers source locations within the 3D volume. We illustrated vTwINS by imaging neural population activity in the mouse primary visual cortex and hippocampus. Our results demonstrated that vTwINS provides an effective method for volumetric two-photon calcium imaging that increases the number of neurons recorded while maintaining a high frame rate.


Asunto(s)
Imagenología Tridimensional/métodos , Microscopía de Fluorescencia por Excitación Multifotónica/métodos , Neuronas/fisiología , Corteza Visual/citología , Algoritmos , Animales , Calcio/análisis , Calcio/metabolismo , Femenino , Hipocampo/citología , Hipocampo/fisiología , Masculino , Ratones Transgénicos , Microscopía Confocal/instrumentación , Microscopía Confocal/métodos , Microscopía de Fluorescencia por Excitación Multifotónica/instrumentación , Imagen Molecular/métodos , Corteza Visual/fisiología
17.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(42): E5725-33, 2015 Oct 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26438852

RESUMEN

The nuclear chromatin structure confines the movement of large macromolecular complexes to interchromatin corrals. Herpesvirus capsids of approximately 125 nm assemble in the nucleoplasm and must reach the nuclear membranes for egress. Previous studies concluded that nuclear herpesvirus capsid motility is active, directed, and based on nuclear filamentous actin, suggesting that large nuclear complexes need metabolic energy to escape nuclear entrapment. However, this hypothesis has recently been challenged. Commonly used microscopy techniques do not allow the imaging of rapid nuclear particle motility with sufficient spatiotemporal resolution. Here, we use a rotating, oblique light sheet, which we dubbed a ring-sheet, to image and track viral capsids with high temporal and spatial resolution. We do not find any evidence for directed transport. Instead, infection with different herpesviruses induced an enlargement of interchromatin domains and allowed particles to diffuse unrestricted over longer distances, thereby facilitating nuclear egress for a larger fraction of capsids.


Asunto(s)
Cápside/metabolismo , Núcleo Celular/metabolismo , Herpesviridae/metabolismo , Línea Celular , Difusión , Herpesviridae/fisiología , Microscopía Fluorescente , Transporte de Proteínas , Replicación Viral
18.
PLoS Pathog ; 10(12): e1004535, 2014 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25474634

RESUMEN

Egress of newly assembled herpesvirus particles from infected cells is a highly dynamic process involving the host secretory pathway working in concert with viral components. To elucidate the location, dynamics, and molecular mechanisms of alpha herpesvirus egress, we developed a live-cell fluorescence microscopy method to visualize the final transport and exocytosis of pseudorabies virus (PRV) particles in non-polarized epithelial cells. This method is based on total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy to selectively image fluorescent virus particles near the plasma membrane, and takes advantage of a virus-encoded pH-sensitive probe to visualize the precise moment and location of particle exocytosis. We performed single-particle tracking and mean squared displacement analysis to characterize particle motion, and imaged a panel of cellular proteins to identify those spatially and dynamically associated with viral exocytosis. Based on our data, individual virus particles travel to the plasma membrane inside small, acidified secretory vesicles. Rab GTPases, Rab6a, Rab8a, and Rab11a, key regulators of the plasma membrane-directed secretory pathway, are present on the virus secretory vesicle. These vesicles undergo fast, directional transport directly to the site of exocytosis, which is most frequently near patches of LL5ß, part of a complex that anchors microtubules to the plasma membrane. Vesicles are tightly docked at the site of exocytosis for several seconds, and membrane fusion occurs, displacing the virion a small distance across the plasma membrane. After exocytosis, particles remain tightly confined on the outer cell surface. Based on recent reports in the cell biological and alpha herpesvirus literature, combined with our spatial and dynamic data on viral egress, we propose an integrated model that links together the intracellular transport pathways and exocytosis mechanisms that mediate alpha herpesvirus egress.


Asunto(s)
Células Epiteliales/metabolismo , Herpesvirus Suido 1/fisiología , Liberación del Virus/fisiología , Proteínas Portadoras/metabolismo , Línea Celular , Células Epiteliales/virología , Humanos , Microscopía Fluorescente , Proteínas de Unión al GTP rab/metabolismo
19.
mBio ; 5(5): e01909-14, 2014 Oct 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25293761

RESUMEN

A considerable part of the herpesvirus life cycle takes place in the host nucleus. While much progress has been made to understand the molecular processes required for virus replication in the nucleus, much less is known about the temporal and spatial dynamics of these events. Previous studies have suggested that nuclear capsid motility is directed and dependent on actin filaments (F-actin), possibly using a myosin-based, ATP-dependent mechanism. However, the conclusions from these studies were indirect. They either relied on the effects of F-actin depolymerizing drugs to deduce an F-actin dependency or they visualized nuclear F-actin but failed to show a direct link to capsid motility. Moreover, no direct link between nuclear capsid motility and a molecular motor has been established. In this report, we reinvestigate the involvement of F-actin in nuclear herpesvirus capsid transport. We show for representative members of all three herpesvirus subfamilies that nuclear capsid motility is not dependent on nuclear F-actin and that herpesvirus infection does not induce nuclear F-actin in primary fibroblasts. Moreover, in these cells, three F-actin-inhibiting drugs failed to effect capsid motility. Only latrunculin A treatment stalled nuclear capsids but did so by an unexpected effect: the drug induced actin rods in the nucleus. Immobile capsids accumulated around actin rods, and immunoprecipitation experiments suggested that capsid motility stopped because latrunculin-induced actin rods nonspecifically bind nuclear capsids. Interestingly, capsid motility was unaffected in cells that do not induce actin rods. Based on these data, we conclude that herpesvirus nuclear capsid motility is not dependent on F-actin. Importance: Herpesviruses are large DNA viruses whose replication is dependent on the host nucleus. However, we do not understand how key nuclear processes, including capsid assembly, genome replication, capsid packaging, and nuclear egress, are dynamically connected in space and time. Fluorescence live-cell microscopy revealed that nuclear capsids are highly mobile early in infection. Two studies suggested that this motility might be due to active myosin-based transport of capsids on nuclear F-actin. However, direct evidence for such motor-based transport is lacking. We revisited this phenomenon and found no evidence that nuclear capsid motility depended on F-actin. Our results reopen the question of how nuclear herpesvirus capsids move in the host nucleus.


Asunto(s)
Actinas/metabolismo , Transporte Biológico , Cápside/metabolismo , Núcleo Celular/virología , Herpesviridae/fisiología , Actinas/antagonistas & inhibidores , Animales , Células Cultivadas , Fibroblastos/virología , Ratones , Microscopía Confocal , Microscopía Fluorescente
20.
Cell Rep ; 5(5): 1169-77, 2013 Dec 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24290763

RESUMEN

Localized cytoplasmic determinants packaged as ribonucleoprotein (RNP) particles direct embryonic patterning and cell fate specification in a wide range of organisms. Once established, the asymmetric distributions of such RNP particles must be maintained, often over considerable developmental time. A striking example is the Drosophila germ plasm, which contains RNP particles whose localization to the posterior of the egg during oogenesis results in their asymmetric inheritance and segregation of germline from somatic fates in the embryo. Although actin-based anchoring mechanisms have been implicated, high-resolution live imaging revealed persistent trafficking of germ plasm RNP particles at the posterior cortex of the Drosophila oocyte. This motility relies on cortical microtubules, is mediated by kinesin and dynein motors, and requires coordination between the microtubule and actin cytoskeletons. Finally, we show that RNP particle motility is required for long-term germ plasm retention. We propose that anchoring is a dynamic state that renders asymmetries robust to developmental time and environmental perturbations.


Asunto(s)
Citoplasma/metabolismo , Proteínas de Drosophila/metabolismo , Oocitos/metabolismo , Ribonucleoproteínas/metabolismo , Citoesqueleto de Actina/metabolismo , Animales , Membrana Celular/metabolismo , Corriente Citoplasmática , Drosophila/metabolismo , Dineínas/metabolismo , Femenino , Cinesinas/metabolismo , Microtúbulos/metabolismo , Transporte de Proteínas
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