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Showing papers by "Martin Heisenberg published in 1997"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that the novel SWS protein plays a role in a signaling mechanism between neurons and glia that regulates glial wrapping during development of the adult brain.
Abstract: Swiss cheese (sws) mutant flies develop normally during larval life but show age-dependent neurodegeneration in the pupa and adult and have reduced life span. In late pupae, glial processes form abnormal, multilayered wrappings around neurons and axons. Degeneration first becomes evident in young flies as apoptosis in single scattered cells in the CNS, but later it becomes severe and widespread. In the adult, the number of glial wrappings increases with age. The sws gene is expressed in neurons in the brain cortex. The conceptual 1425 amino acid protein shows two domains with homology to the regulatory subunits of protein kinase A and to conceptual proteins of yet unknown function in yeast, worm, and human. Sequencing of two sws alleles shows amino acid substitutions in these two conserved domains. It is suggested that the novel SWS protein plays a role in a signaling mechanism between neurons and glia that regulates glial wrapping during development of the adult brain.

250 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that visual stimulation modifies the size of the optic lobes in the laboratory fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster, suggesting a critical period for lamina development during day 1 of the adult.
Abstract: Early experience can affect nervous system development in both vertebrate and invertebrate animals. We have now demonstrated that visual stimulation modifies the size of the optic lobes in the laboratory fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster. Monocular deprivation (painting over one eye) decreases the aggregate volume of the lamina, medulla, and lobula plate by up to 6%. The laminae of control flies kept in complete darkness showed a more robust volume difference that could be as much as 30%. An electron microscopy study revealed that the changes in the lamina are largely attributable to an increase in the terminals of the photoreceptor cell axons. The volume of the lamina increases during the first 24 hr after emergence, and it grows more in the light than in darkness. When flies are kept in the dark for the first 12 hr of their adult life and are then brought back to light for the next 3.5 days, the lamina is almost as small as in flies raised for 4 d in constant darkness. Twelve hour dark shifts at a later time are less effective. This finding suggests a critical period for lamina development during day 1 of the adult. The lamina depends on visual stimulation to maintain its size during the first 5 d after emergence. Dark-rearing for 1 d or more at any stage during that period decreases its volume to the level of flies raised in constant darkness. A lamina that is once reduced in size seems not to recover.

141 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An analysis of the behavioural subcomponents of courtship for pairs of LD females with LD and with DD males suggest that the assortative effect is mediated by copulation attempts of the males which are instrumental in reducing copulation latency.

50 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Oct 1997-Gene
TL;DR: In-situ hybridization and Northern blot analysis indicate a widespread function of this gene during embryogenesis and in the CNS, and cloned a gene for a regulatory subunit from Drosophila melanogaster, named droPIK57, from head-specific cDNA libraries.

5 citations