Pendleton Robert G, Rasheed Aseel, Sardina Thomas, Tully Tim, Hillman Ralph
Department of Biology, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19122, USA.
Behav Genet. 2002 Mar;32(2):89-94. doi: 10.1023/a:1015279221600.
The brain of the adult fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, contains tyrosine hydroxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme required for catecholamine biosynthesis, as well as dopa decarboxylase. Catecholamines, principally dopamine, are also present. We have previously shown that pharmacological inhibition of tyrosine hydroxylase with alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine results in a dose-related inhibition of locomotor activity in adult organisms. Similar results were found with reserpine, a well-known inhibitor of catecholamine uptake into storage granules. The drug-induced inhibition could be prevented in each case by the concomitant administration of L-dopa. The single-copy gene coding for tyrosine hydroxylase in Drosophila is pale (ple). Both null and temperature-sensitive loss of function mutant alleles of ple are recessive embryonic lethals. Heterozygous null mutant flies have normal locomotor activity demonstrating that only a single dose of the wild type form of ple is required to support normal function. Both hemizygous and homozygous temperature-sensitive ple mutants (ple(ts1)) also show normal locomotor activity at the permissive temperature for this mutant allele (18 degrees C), which progressively declines as the temperature is increased to its restrictive level (29 degrees C). These abnormal locomotor effects are reversible by L-dopa. Thus the effects on locomotor activity resulting from the pharmacological inhibition of catecholamine synthesis or storage are the same as those resulting from lack of tyrosine hydroxylase expression. These findings indicate that brain catecholamine loss decreases locomotor activity in the fly, as it does in mammals, and demonstrate the ability of functional genomic studies to mimic that of pharmacological inhibition of enzyme function or other similar processes.
成年果蝇(黑腹果蝇)的大脑含有酪氨酸羟化酶,这是儿茶酚胺生物合成所需的限速酶,同时还含有多巴脱羧酶。儿茶酚胺,主要是多巴胺,也存在于其中。我们之前已经表明,用α-甲基-对-酪氨酸对酪氨酸羟化酶进行药理学抑制会导致成年生物体的运动活性出现剂量相关的抑制。用利血平(一种众所周知的儿茶酚胺摄取到储存颗粒的抑制剂)也发现了类似的结果。在每种情况下,通过同时给予左旋多巴可以预防药物诱导的抑制。果蝇中编码酪氨酸羟化酶的单拷贝基因是苍白基因(ple)。ple的功能缺失型无效等位基因和温度敏感型等位基因都是隐性胚胎致死基因。杂合无效突变果蝇具有正常的运动活性,这表明仅需单剂量的野生型ple形式就能支持正常功能。半合子和纯合子温度敏感型ple突变体(ple(ts1))在该突变等位基因的允许温度(18摄氏度)下也表现出正常的运动活性,随着温度升高到其限制水平(29摄氏度),运动活性会逐渐下降。这些异常的运动效应可被左旋多巴逆转。因此,儿茶酚胺合成或储存的药理学抑制对运动活性的影响与酪氨酸羟化酶表达缺乏所导致的影响相同。这些发现表明,大脑儿茶酚胺的缺失会降低果蝇的运动活性,就像在哺乳动物中一样,并且证明了功能基因组学研究能够模拟酶功能的药理学抑制或其他类似过程。