Bochum, 18.3.2013
In the fruit fly Drosophila, the functions of the three enzymes Tan, Ebony and Black are closely intertwined - among other things they are involved in neurotransmitter recycling for the visual process. RUB researchers from the Department of Biochemistry showed for the first time that flies cannot see without this recycling. Their analysis of the enzyme Black also raises new questions as to its function. Anna Ziegler, Florian Brüsselbach and Bernhard Hovemann report in the „Journal of Comparative Neurology", which chose this topic as cover story.
Tan, Ebony and Black are important for the visual process and the formation of the cuticle
The fruit fly's genes tan, ebony and black contain the construction plans for three enzymes with the same names that work together in hardening the outer shell of the body, the cuticle. The same enzymes also occur in the compound eye of the fly. Researchers therefore assume that Tan, Ebony and Black work together in vision - similar to the way they do in the formation of the cuticle. In fact, flies with mutations of the ebony and tan genes cannot see. A mutation of the black gene, however, has no such effect. Prof. Hovemann's team examined where the enzyme Black appears in the compound eye and the role it plays in vision.
Black and Ebony always occur together
First, the scientists tested where the genes ebony and black are active in the compound eye of the fruit fly and in its extra eyes on the head, the ocelli. They put different types of light-sensitive cells called photoreceptors, under the microscope. The result: both genes are always read together - just like in the cuticle. This suggests that the functions of the enzymes Ebony and Black are closely linked.
Vision requires a continuous flow of the neurotransmitter histamine
When light falls into the compound eye, the photoreceptors release the neurotransmitter histamine. In previous studies, Bochum's biochemists already demonstrated that histamine is recycled via the glial cells surrounding the photoreceptors. There, the enzyme Ebony inactivates the neurotransmitter histamine by binding it to the amino acid ß-alanine, thus creating ß-alanyl-histamine. This molecule is transported from the glial cells back into the photoreceptors. Here, ß-alanine is split off again by the enzyme Tan, and histamine is produced. Previously, it was assumed that the enzyme Black is responsible for producing the ß-alanine, which is required for the inactivation of histamine. However, if a fly's eye has no functional Black, the visual process still runs normally. Hovemann's team therefore looked into the question of whether there is another supply route for ß-alanine. They also tested whether the fly eye can get around the recycling of histamine; this would be possible if the photoreceptors could directly reabsorb the released neurotransmitter, without it being inactivated in the glial cells.
No functioning sense of sight without histamine recycling
The researchers examined flies that were neither able to produce histamine themselves nor recycle it, because they lacked the enzyme for histamine synthesis and the enzyme Ebony. The team measured the flies' vision using so-termed electroretinography, which not only shows the excitation of the photoreceptor cells, but also the transmission of the signal to the brain. Even when the researchers added histamine from outside, the flies were blind. With this test, they showed for the first time that, for vision, Drosophila is dependent on the histamine recycling in the glial cells. Without recycling the enzyme Ebony, the cells in the insect eye cannot make any use of the neurotransmitter.
Flies can also see with disturbed ß-alanine production
Cells are not only able to produce ß-alanine with the aid of the enzyme Black, but also by converting the molecule uracil into ß-alanine using other enzymes. Hovemann's team inactivated both production pathways for ß-alanine and tested the vision of the fruit fly again. According to the electroretinogram, the animals' sense of sight was not impaired by the double mutation. "The results seem to represent a contradiction", says Bernhard Hovemann. "Although the insect eyes with the double mutation cannot produce ß-alanine, the animals seem to have normal vision. At the same time, our data clearly shows that the recycling by attaching ß-alanine is necessary for the animals to see." The researchers suggest that ß-alanine – like histamine – is recycled in a circuit between glial cells and photoreceptors. This would mean that the enzyme Black merely compensates for ß-alanine losses. "That would explain why we do not immediately find visual defects in flies which cannot produce new ß-alanine", says Hovemann. These puzzles can, however, only be solved by further studies.
Bibliographic record
A.B. Ziegler, F. Brüsselbach, B.T. Hovemann (2013): Activity and coexpression of Drosophila black with ebony in fly optic lobes reveals putative cooperative tasks in vision that evade electroretinographic detection, Journal of Comparative Neurology, DOI: 10.1002/cne.23247
Images online
Images related to this press release can be found online at: http://aktuell.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/pm2013/pm00078.html.en
Further information
Prof. Dr. Bernhard Hovemann
Work Group for Molecular Cell Biochemistry
Faculty of Chemistry and Biochemistry at the Ruhr-Universität
44780 Bochum, Germany
Editor: Dr. Julia Weiler
Journal
Journal of Comparative Neurology