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Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2005 June 7; 102(23): 8345–8350.
Published online 2005 May 31. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0500862102.
PMCID: PMC1149420
Neuroscience
Zebrafish bandoneon mutants display behavioral defects due to a mutation in the glycine receptor β-subunit
Hiromi Hirata,* Louis Saint-Amant,* Gerald B. Downes, Wilson W. Cui,* Weibin Zhou,* Michael Granato, and John Y. Kuwada*
*Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1048; and Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6058
To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: hhirata/at/umich.edu.
Edited by Lynn T. Landmesser, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, and approved April 26, 2005
Received February 1, 2005.
Abstract
Bilateral alternation of muscle contractions requires reciprocal inhibition between the two sides of the hindbrain and spinal cord, and disruption of this inhibition should lead to simultaneous activation of bilateral muscles. At 1 day after fertilization, wild-type zebrafish respond to mechanosensory stimulation with multiple fast alternating trunk contractions, whereas bandoneon (beo) mutants contract trunk muscles on both sides simultaneously. Similar simultaneous contractions are observed in wild-type embryos treated with strychnine, a blocker of the inhibitory glycine receptor (GlyR). This result suggests that glycinergic synaptic transmission is defective in beo mutants. Muscle voltage recordings confirmed that muscles on both sides of the trunk in beo are likely to receive simultaneous synaptic input from the CNS. Recordings from motor neurons revealed that glycinergic synaptic transmission was missing in beo mutants. Furthermore, immunostaining with an antibody against GlyR showed clusters in wild-type neurons but not in beo neurons. These data suggest that the failure of GlyRs to aggregate at synaptic sites causes impairment of glycinergic transmission and abnormal behavior in beo mutants. Indeed, mutations in the GlyR β-subunit, which are thought to be required for proper localization of GlyRs, were identified as the basis for the beo mutation. These data demonstrate that GlyRβ is essential for physiologically relevant clustering of GlyRs in vivo. Because GlyR mutations in humans lead to hyperekplexia, a motor disorder characterized by startle responses, the zebrafish beo mutant should be a useful animal model for this condition.
Keywords: channel, synapse, hyperekplexia, strychnine