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Showing papers by "Constance Scharff published in 2017"


Journal ArticleDOI
22 Nov 2017-eLife
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that to achieve rapid actomyosin crossbridge kinetics bat and songbird SFM express myosin heavy chain genes that are evolutionarily and ontologically distinct, and that all known SFMs share multiple functional adaptations that minimize excitation-contraction coupling transduction times.
Abstract: Across animals, different muscle types have evolved to perform vastly different tasks at different speeds. For example, tortoise leg muscles move slowly over several seconds, while the flight muscles of a hummingbird move quickly dozens of times per second. The speed record holders among vertebrates are the so-called superfast muscles, which can move up to 250 times per second. Superfast muscles power the alarming rattle of rattlesnakes, courtship calls in fish, rapid echolocation calls in bats and the elaborate vocal gymnastics of songbirds. Thus these extreme muscles are all around us and are always involved in sound production. Did superfast muscles evolve from a common ancestor? And how do different superfast muscles achieve their extreme behavior? To answer these questions, Mead et al. studied the systems known to limit contraction speed in all currently known superfast muscles found in rattlesnakes, toadfish, bats and songbirds. This revealed that all the muscles share certain specific adaptations that allow superfast contractions. Furthermore, the three fastest examples – toadfish, songbird and bat – have nearly identical maximum speeds. Although this appears to support the idea that the adaptations all evolved from a shared ancestor, Mead et al. found evidence that suggests otherwise. Each of the three superfast muscles are powered by a different motor protein, which argues strongly in favor of the muscles evolving independently. The existence of such similar mechanisms and performance in independently evolved muscles raises the possibility that the fastest contraction rates measured by Mead et al. represent a maximum speed limit for all vertebrate muscles. Any technical failure in a racecar most likely will slow it down, while the same failure in a robustly engineered family car may not be so noticeable. Similarly in superfast muscle many cellular and molecular systems need to perform maximally. Therefore by understanding how these extreme muscles work, we also gain a better understanding of how normal muscles contract.

40 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results pave the way for studies using zebra finches to understand the neural basis of social behavior, in which the extended amygdala is involved, and proposed that the medial bed nucleus of the stria terminalis is composed of several parallel cell corridors with different genetic profile and embryonic origin.
Abstract: We used a battery of genes encoding transcription factors (Pax6, Islet1, Nkx2.1, Lhx6, Lhx5, Lhx9, FoxP2) and neuropeptides to study the extended amygdala in developing zebra finches. We identified different components of the central extended amygdala comparable to those found in mice and chickens, including the intercalated amygdalar cells, the central amygdala, and the lateral bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. Many cells likely originate in the dorsal striatal domain, ventral striatal domain, or the pallidal domain, as is the case in mice and chickens. Moreover, a cell subpopulation of the central extended amygdala appears to originate in the prethalamic eminence. As a general principle, these different cells with specific genetic profiles and embryonic origin form separate or partially intermingled cell corridors along the extended amygdala, which may be involved in different functional pathways. In addition, we identified the medial amygdala of the zebra finch. Like in the chickens and mice, it is located in the subpallium and is rich in cells of pallido-preoptic origin, containing minor subpopulations of immigrant cells from the ventral pallium, alar hypothalamus and prethalamic eminence. We also proposed that the medial bed nucleus of the stria terminalis is composed of several parallel cell corridors with different genetic profile and embryonic origin: preoptic, pallidal, hypothalamic, and prethalamic. Several of these cell corridors with distinct origin express FoxP2, a transcription factor implicated in synaptic plasticity. Our results pave the way for studies using zebra finches to understand the neural basis of social behavior, in which the extended amygdala is involved.

34 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Interestingly, FoxP1/2/4 individually or in combinations regulate the promoters for SV40, zebra finch VLDLR and CNTNAP2 differentially, highlighting the need for future functional studies dissecting their differential regulation in the brain.
Abstract: The Forkhead transcription factor FOXP2 is implicated in speech perception and production. The avian homologue, FoxP2 , contributes to song learning and production in birds. In human cell lines, transcriptional activity of FOXP2 requires homo-dimerization or dimerization with paralogues FOXP1 or FOXP4. Whether FoxP dimerization occurs in the brain is unknown. We recently showed that FoxP1, FoxP2 and FoxP4 (FoxP1/2/4) proteins are co-expressed in neurons of Area X, a song control region in zebra finches. We now report on dimer- and oligomerization of zebra finch FoxPs and how this affects transcription. In cell lines and in the brain we identify homo- and hetero-dimers, and an oligomer composed of FoxP1/2/4. We further show that FoxP1/2/4 bind to the regulatory region of the target gene CNTNAP2 and FoxP1/4 to the regulatory region of VLDLR. Interestingly, FoxP1/2/4 individually or in combinations regulate the promoters for SV40, zebra finch VLDLR and CNTNAP2 differentially. These data exemplify the potential for complex transcriptional regulation of FoxP1/2/4, highlighting the need for future functional studies dissecting their differential regulation in the brain.

22 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: CNTNAP2 is established as a direct FoxP2 target gene in songbirds, likely affecting synaptic function relevant for song learning and song maintenance.
Abstract: Mutations of FOXP2 are associated with altered brain structure, including the striatal part of the basal ganglia, and cause a severe speech and language disorder. Songbirds serve as a tractable neurobiological model for speech and language research. Experimental downregulation of FoxP2 in zebra finch Area X, a nucleus of the striatal song control circuitry, affects synaptic transmission and spine densities. It also renders song learning and production inaccurate and imprecise, similar to the speech impairment of patients carrying FOXP2 mutations. Here we show that experimental downregulation of FoxP2 in Area X using lentiviral vectors leads to reduced expression of CNTNAP2, a FOXP2 target gene in humans. In addition, natural downregulation of FoxP2 by age or by singing also downregulated CNTNAP2 expression. Furthermore, we report that FoxP2 binds to and activates the avian CNTNAP2 promoter in vitro. Taken together these data establish CNTNAP2 as a direct FoxP2 target gene in songbirds, likely affecting synaptic function relevant for song learning and song maintenance.

18 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence is provided that newborn MSNs in Area X constantly functionally integrate into the circuit and are thus likely to play a role in the maintenance and regulation of adult song.
Abstract: Neurogenesis continues in the adult songbird brain. Many telencephalic song control regions incorporate new neurons into their existing circuits in adulthood. One song nucleus that receives many new neurons is Area X. Because this striatal region is crucial for song learning and song maintenance the recruitment of new neurons into Area X could influence these processes. As an entry point into addressing this possibility, we investigated the maturation and connectivity within the song circuit and behavioral activation of newly generated Area X neurons. Using BrdU birth dating and virally mediated GFP expression we followed adult-generated neurons from their place of birth in the ventricle to their place of incorporation into Area X. We show that newborn neurons receive glutamatergic input from pallial/cortical song nuclei. Additionally, backfills revealed that the new neurons connect to pallidal-like projection neurons that innervate the thalamus. Using in situ hybridization, we found that new neurons express the mRNA for D1- and D2-type dopamine receptors. Employing DARPP-32 (dopamine and cAMP-regulated phosphoprotein of 32kDa) and EGR-1 (early growth response protein 1) as markers for neural maturation and activation, we established that at 42 days after labelling approximately 80% of new neurons were mature medium spiny neurons (MSNs) and could be activated by singing behavior. Finally, we compared the MSN density in Area X of birds up to seven years of age and found a significant increase with age, indicating that new neurons are constantly added to the nucleus. In summary, we provide evidence that newborn MSNs in Area X constantly functionally integrate into the circuit and are thus likely to play a role in the maintenance and regulation of adult song.

12 citations


Posted ContentDOI
06 Jun 2017-bioRxiv
TL;DR: Genomic analysis is used to identify the myosin heavy chain genes expressed in bat and songbird SFM to achieve rapid actomyosin crossbridge kinetics and demonstrate that these are evolutionarily and ontologically distinct, and show that all known SFM share multiple functional adaptations that minimize ECC transduction times.
Abstract: Superfast muscles (SFM) are extremely fast synchronous muscles capable of contraction rates up to 250 Hz, enabling precise motor execution at the millisecond time scale. To allow such speed, the archetypal SFM, found in the toadfish swimbladder, has hallmark structural and kinetic adaptations at each step of the conserved excitation-contraction coupling (ECC) pathway. More recently SFM phenotypes have been discovered in most major vertebrate lineages, but it remains unknown whether all SFM share ECC adaptations for speed, and if SFM arose once, or from independent evolutionary events. Here we use genomic analysis to identify the myosin heavy chain genes expressed in bat and songbird SFM to achieve rapid actomyosin crossbridge kinetics and demonstrate that these are evolutionarily and ontologically distinct. Furthermore, by quantifying cellular morphometry and calcium signal transduction combined with force measurements we show that all known SFM share multiple functional adaptations that minimize ECC transduction times. Our results suggest that SFM evolved independently in sound producing organs in ray-finned fish, birds, and mammals, and that SFM phenotypes operate at a maximum operational speed set by fundamental constraints in synchronous muscle. Consequentially, these constraints set a fundamental limit to the maximum speed of fine motor control.

10 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The development and adult distribution of a FoxP‐expressing neuron population in the MB of honeybees is reported using in situ hybridisation and a custom‐made antiserum, consistent with the concept of deep homology of FoxP expression in neuron populations coding reinforcement‐based learning and habit formation.
Abstract: The arthropod mushroom bodies (MB) are a higher order sensory integration centre. In insects, they play a central role in associative olfactory learning and memory. In Drosophila melanogaster (Dm), the highly ordered connectivity of heterogeneous MB neuron populations has been mapped using sophisticated molecular genetic and anatomical techniques. The MB-core subpopulation was recently shown to express the transcription factor FoxP with relevance for decision-making. Here, we report the development and adult distribution of a FoxP-expressing neuron population in the MB of honeybees (Apis mellifera, Am) using in situ hybridisation and a custom-made antiserum. We found the same expression pattern in adult bumblebees (Bombus terrestris, Bt). We also designed a new Dm transgenic line that reports FoxP transcriptional activity in the MB-core region, clarifying previously conflicting data of two other reporter lines. Considering developmental, anatomical and molecular similarities, our data are consistent with the concept of deep homology of FoxP expression in neuron populations coding reinforcement-based learning and habit formation.

8 citations