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Growing together
http://www.100md.com 《细胞学杂志》
     Hidalgo/Elsevier

    Talk about codependence. In the developing Drosophila nerve cord, neurons and glia cannot survive without each other. Kill a neuron, and its supporting glia will die, and vice versa. New research illuminates one of the molecular mechanisms behind this relationship. Neurons produce a protein that keeps glial cells alive, and in the process help shape the growing nervous system.

    Alicia Hidalgo (Cambridge University, Cambridge, UK) and colleagues determined the effects of the protein Vein on survival of glial cells in the developing ventral nerve cord of Drosophila. The protein is made in the pioneer neurons that lay down the scaffolding for the nerve cord. Blocking Vein production or blocking its receptors kills the glia near the pioneer neurons, the authors found. They also showed that Vein acts by activating the Ras/MAP-kinase pathway in those glia.

    Whereas most neurons require glia for survival, pioneer neurons depend on glia to guide their growth, not for survival. As the nervous system develops, glia help to establish the trajectories of the pioneers' axons by stationing themselves at key points where the axons "decide" which direction to steer or to which partner axon to adhere, Hidalgo says. Normal flies produce far too many glia, many of which eventually die. Which cells survive helps determine the pattern of axon trajectories, and Vein may thus indirectly mold neural pathways."One of the implications of this work is that the insect nervous system is just as plastic as the vertebrate nervous system," Hidalgo says. She ventures that Drosophila might even be a good model for studying processes once thought to need a vertebrate model, such as regrowth of a damaged spinal cord.

    Reference:

    Hidalgo, A., et al. 2001. Dev. Cell. 1:679–690.(Less production of Vein by neurons (righ)