Current Biology
Volume 20, Issue 1, 12 January 2010, Pages 9-18
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Article
Transcriptional Orchestration of the Regulated Secretory Pathway in Neurons by the bHLH protein DIMM

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Summary

Background

The Drosophila basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) gene dimmed (dimm) promotes a neurosecretory/neuroendocrine phenotype in cells but is not associated with specific neuropeptides or neurohormones. Rather, it is expressed by those peptidergic neurons that project long axons and appear to produce large amounts of secretory peptides. Here, we genetically transform nonpeptidergic neurons in Drosophila to study DIMM's action mechanisms.

Results

Nonpeptidergic neurons normally fail to accumulate ectopic neuropeptides. We now show that they will do so when they are also forced to express ectopic DIMM. Furthermore, mass spectrometry shows that photoreceptors, which are normally nonpeptidergic, fail to process an ectopic neuropeptide precursor to make bioactive peptides but will do so efficiently when DIMM is co-misexpressed. Likewise, photoreceptors, which normally package the fast neurotransmitter histamine within small clear synaptic vesicles, produce numerous large dense-core vesicles (LDCVs) when they misexpress DIMM. These novel LDCVs accumulate ectopic neuropeptide when photoreceptors co-misexpress a neuropeptide transgene. DIMM-expressing photoreceptors no longer accumulate histamine and lose synaptic organelles critical to their normal physiology.

Conclusions

These findings indicate that DIMM suppresses conventional fast neurotransmission and promotes peptidergic neurosecretory properties. We conclude that DIMM normally provides a comprehensive transcriptional control to direct the differentiation of dedicated neuroendocrine neurons.

Highlights

► The bHLH protein DIMM promotes the properties common to all neuroendocrine cells ► DIMM can transfer these properties to nonneuroendocrine cells ► Ectopic neuropeptides accumulate and are processed within DIMM-dependent granules ► DIMM thereby provides transcriptional control of the regulated secretory pathway

MOLNEURO

Cited by (0)

4

These authors contributed equally to this work

5

Present address: Laboratory of Neuroethology, The Graduate University for Advanced Studies (Sokendai), Shonan Village, Hayama, Kanagawa 240-0193, Japan