Mutational analysis of Drosophila Basigin
by Munro, Michelle A. R., M.S., UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS, 2009, 52 pages; 1478498

Abstract:

Drosophila basigin is a cell-surface glycoprotein of the IgG superfamily and a member of a protein family that includes mammalian EMMPRIN/CD147/basigin, neuroplastin, and embigin. Our previous work on Drosophila basigin has shown that it is required for normal photoreceptor cell structure and normal neuron-glia interaction in the fly visual system. Specifically, the photoreceptor neurons of mosaic animals that are mutant in the eye for basigin show altered cell structure with nuclei, mitochondria and rER misplaced and variable axon diameter compared to wild-type. In addition, glia cells in the optic lamina that contact photoreceptor axons are misplaced and show altered structure. All these defects are rescued by expression of either transgenic fly basigin or transgenic mouse basigin in the photoreceptors demonstrating that mouse basigin can functionally replaces fly basigin. To determine what regions of the basigin protein are required for each of these functions, we have created mutant basigin transgenes coding for proteins that are altered in conserved residues, introduced these into the fly genome, and tested them for their ability to rescue both photoreceptor cell structure defects and neuron-glia interaction defects of basigin . The results suggest that the highly conserved transmembrane domain and the extracellular domains are crucial for basigin function in the visual system while the short intercellular tail may not play a role in these functions.

 
Advisor
SchoolUNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS
SourceMAI/ 48-03, p. , Feb 2010
Source TypeThesis
SubjectsMolecular biology; Genetics; Cellular biology
Publication Number1478498
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