artículo
Correction: Intracellular Calcium Deficits in Drosophila Cholinergic Neurons Expressing Wild Type or FAD-Mutant Presenilin
Fecha
2009Registro en:
10.1371/annotation/f8cecc73-06ec-4bba-b07a-a3bc2a08f4c7
1932-6203
Autor
Europe PubMed Central
Institución
Resumen
Much of our current understanding about neurodegenerative diseases can be attributed to the study of inherited forms of
these disorders. For example, mutations in the presenilin 1 and 2 genes have been linked to early onset familial forms of
Alzheimer’s disease (FAD). Using the Drosophila central nervous system as a model we have investigated the role of
presenilin in one of the earliest cellular defects associated with Alzheimer’s disease, intracellular calcium deregulation. We
show that expression of either wild type or FAD-mutant presenilin in Drosophila CNS neurons has no impact on resting
calcium levels but does give rise to deficits in intracellular calcium stores. Furthermore, we show that a loss-of-function
mutation in calmodulin, a key regulator of intracellular calcium, can suppress presenilin-induced deficits in calcium stores.
Our data support a model whereby presenilin plays a role in regulating intracellular calcium stores and demonstrate that
Drosophila can be used to study the link between presenilin and calcium deregulation.