Scientists identify important regulator for synapse stability and plasticity
Using the fruit fly as a model organism, neurobiologists from the Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research have identified the L1-type CAM neuroglian as an important regulator for synapse growth, function and stability. They show that the interaction of neuroglian with ankyrin provides a regulatory module to locally control synaptic connectivity and function. From its earliest beginnings until an organism's death, the nervous system changes. Connections between nerve cells are formed, stabilized and disassembled not only during the development of the brain in the womb and in early childhood, but also in adults as they learn or form memories. In this flow of change, cell adhesion molecules (CAMs), which mediate cell-cell interactions, are thought to provide stability and guidance in a Velcro-like-manner as synapses change. Jan Pielage and his group at the Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research have carried out an unbiased genetic screen to identify cell adhesion molecules that control synapse maintenance and plasticity, using the fruit fly, Drosophila. As they publish in the latest issue of PLOS Biology , they identified the cell adhesion molecule called neuroglian as a key regulator for synapse stability.


