| Literature DB >> 24267573 |
Katja Prüßing1, Aaron Voigt, Jörg B Schulz.
Abstract
Drosophila melanogaster provides an important resource for in vivo modifier screens of neurodegenerative diseases. To study the underlying pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease, fly models that address Tau or amyloid toxicity have been developed. Overexpression of human wild-type or mutant Tau causes age-dependent neurodegeneration, axonal transport defects and early death. Large-scale screens utilizing a neurodegenerative phenotype induced by eye-specific overexpression of human Tau have identified several kinases and phosphatases, apoptotic regulators and cytoskeleton proteins as determinants of Tau toxicity in vivo. The APP ortholog of Drosophila (dAPPl) shares the characteristic domains with vertebrate APP family members, but does not contain the human Aβ42 domain. To circumvent this drawback, researches have developed strategies by either direct secretion of human Aβ42 or triple transgenic flies expressing human APP, β-secretase and Drosophila γ-secretase presenilin (dPsn). Here, we provide a brief overview of how fly models of AD have contributed to our knowledge of the pathomechanisms of disease.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24267573 PMCID: PMC4222597 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1326-8-35
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Neurodegener ISSN: 1750-1326 Impact factor: 14.195
Advantages and disadvantages of using as a model organism for neurodegenerative diseases like AD
| No ethical problems/no restrictions according to animal protection laws | Brain anatomy, cardiovascular system and respiration systems differs substantially from humans |
| Easy and cheap to maintain in large quantities, time and cost effective handling | No easy measure of complex behavior |
| Genetic manipulation is fast and inexpensive (3 month, < $ 500 per transgene) | Only basic measures of cognitive decline |
| Plethora of available resources/stocks (e.g. genome-wide RNAi-library) | Sometimes poor conservation of proteins/protein function |
| Short generation time (~10 days), short life span (2–3 month) | Maintenance as living cultures only, no permanent conservation (e.g. frozen stocks) possible |
| Fully sequenced and annotated genome | Less complex and adaptive immune system as in vertebrates |
| Good conservation of basic signaling pathways and cellular processes in general | Effects of drugs on the organism might differ strongly (e.g. conversion of pro-toxins to toxins in liver) |
| Low redundancy/reduced number of paralogous genes compared to vertebrates | |
| Probably best analyzed/understood multi- cellular organism | |
| More complex organism compare to | |
| Balancer chromosomes allow the maintenance of mutations/trangenes without genotyping |
Figure 1Genetic tools in In Drosophila the UAS/Gal4 expression system has been used extensively to express endogenous and exogenous sequences in the tissue of interest [39]. This is implemented using two different lines. The so-called driver line contains a Gal4 coding sequence inserted downstream of a promoter of an endogenous Drosophila gene. Gal4 is a transcription factor originating from Saccharomyces cerevisiae[40]. It specifically binds to promoter elements termed upstream activating sequence (UAS), thus activating expression of the downstream target sequence [40,41]. A collection of Gal4 driver lines which display a great variety of Gal4 expression in numerous tissues and organs is available to the public [42]. Frequently used are the glass multimer reporter (GMR) driver inducing retinal expression [43] and the elav driver inducing pan-neuronal expression [44]. After crossbreeding both, the Gal4 driver and the UAS line, the UAS target sequences will be expressed in a spatiotemporal manner (depending on the Gal4 driver used). EP-elements are randomly inserted in the fly genome and contain UAS sites. Depending on the orientation EP-elements might facilitate activation (same orientation) or inactivation (reverse orientation) of neighboring genes in a Gal4-dependent manner. There are various collections of EP strains available allowing misexpression of a large number of fly genes [45,46]. So-called RNAi lines express short inverted repeat sequences under UAS control. The sequence of the inverted repeat corresponds to an endogenous gene. Gal4-dependent expression of the inverted repeat results in the formation short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs). The presence of shRNAs initiates a series of cellular mechanisms eventually resulting in silencing of the corresponding endogenous gene by RNA interference (RNAi) [47].
Overview of performed large-scale screens for modifiers of toxicity induced by expression of AD-linked genes in
| hTau[V337M] | 2,276 EP strains | • Kinases, phosphatases (CDK5, GSK3β, PAR1) | Shulman & Feany [ |
| • Apoptosis | |||
| • Novel: Ataxin 2, Fmr1 | |||
| hTau[V337M] | 1,250 P-element strains | • Cytoskeletal components | Blard |
| • Molecular chaperones | |||
| • Chromatin remodelling | |||
| hTau[WT] | 920 P-lethal strains | • Kinases, Phosphatases | Ambegaokar |
| 895 EY strains | • Autophagy/lysosomal | ||
| • RNA processing | |||
| • Chromatin regulation | |||
| • Cytoskeletal | |||
| GMR > Aβ42 | 1,963 EP strains | • Secretory pathway | Cao |
| • Cholesterol homeostasis | |||
| • Chromatin regulation | |||
| Pan neural Arctic Aβ42 life span reduction | 3,000 de novo insertions of transposable elements | • Fenton chemistry and oxidative stress are involved in AD pathology | Rival |
| • Ferritin expression protects from β-amyloid toxicity |
The table lists only screens in which the fly was used as primary screening tool. Not listed are screens using other sources to gain candidates, later confirmed in flies.
Figure 2Exemplified rough eye phenotypes (REP) used as readout for modifier screens. Scanning electron micrographs (top) of fly eyes are shown. The Drosophila compound eye consists of a stereotypic array of about 800 omatidia (left). These hexagonal structures are highly ordered and display regular spacing of hairs called interomatidial bristles (inset). Expression of disease-linked proteins/peptides in the eye can cause a REP (middle). The rough appearance of the eye can be caused by loss of interomatidial bristles, fusion of omatidia, necrotic tissue, dints in the retina and is often accompanied by loss of pigmentation and reduced eye size. An enhancement in severity (left) is easily observable by more pronounced REP characteristics. Usually, such REPs are sensitive towards genetic interactions, causing either a suppression (left) or an enhancement (right), changing the overall eye appearance towards a more wild-type like appearance (suppression) or by increasing the rough appearance of the eye (enhancement), respectively. Exemplary light micrographs show REPs induced by expression of either Tau[R406W] (middle) or Aβ42 (bottom). These REPs are sensitive towards genetic modification like suppression (left) and enhancement (right) and can be/have been used for screening approaches.