| Literature DB >> 11072753 |
E Savvateeva1, A Popov, N Kamyshev, J Bragina, M Heisenberg, D Senitz, J Kornhuber, P Riederer.
Abstract
A search for Drosophila mutants with phenotypes similar to human diseases might help to unravel evolutionary conserved genes implicated in polygenic human disorders. Among these are neurodegenerative diseases, characterized by a late onset disturbance of memory, synaptic and glial pathology, structural brain impairments and altered content of the intermediates of the kynurenine pathway, the modulators of glutamate excito- and oxidative toxicity. This pathway is conserved in insects, in rodents, and in humans. We tested the Drosophila mutants cardinal (3-hydroxykynurenine excess) and cinnabar (kynurenic acid excess) for age-dependent changes in memory, synaptic pathology, structural brain plasticity and glial immunoreactivity. The mutant cardinal demonstrated a decline in learning and memory from the 12th to the 29th day of life in a paradigm of conditioned courtship suppression. Memory decline was accompanied by a sharp decrease in immunoreactivity to the synaptic cysteine string protein, and alterations in volumetric parameters of the mushroom bodies, the brain structures implicated in memory.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2000 PMID: 11072753 DOI: 10.1007/s007020070080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neural Transm (Vienna) ISSN: 0300-9564 Impact factor: 3.575