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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Finley KD, Edeen PT, Cumming RC, Mardahl-Dumesnil MD, Taylor BJ, Rodriguez MH, Hwang CE, Benedetti M, McKeown M. blue cheese mutations define a novel, conserved gene involved in progressive neural degeneration. J Neurosci. 2003 Feb 15;23(4):1254-64. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Behold the Power of Cheese

Comment by:  Chris Link
Submitted 15 February 2003  |  Permalink Posted 15 February 2003

The demonstration by Finley et al that loss of function of the blue cheese (bchs) gene in Drosophila leads to adult-stage neurodegeneration may be a very important finding, with implications for a range of neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and ALS. Perhaps the two key findings of these studies are that the neurodegeneration is age-related, and that it is accompanied by accumulation of protein aggregates, characteristics also observed in the diseases mentioned above. Although many studies have employed invertebrate models (e.g., flies and the nematode C. elegans) to study neurodegeneration, this is the first study where loss-of-function mutations have been shown to cause age-dependent, aggregation-associated neurodegeneration.

Although blue cheese is a novel gene, it contains protein motifs suggesting a role in vesicle and lysosomal trafficking. It is tempting to speculate that this gene functions in intracellular protein degradation, and its loss results in the eventual accumulation of aggregated proteins,...  Read more


  Primary News: Behold the Power of Cheese

Comment by:  John Nambu
Submitted 23 February 2003  |  Permalink Posted 23 February 2003

The study by McKeown and colleagues describes a novel Drosophila gene—blue cheese—that is required for the survival of neurons in aging adult flies. They show that while homozygous blue cheese mutants survive into adulthood, they exhibit a 40-45 percent reduction in adult longevity, and an age-dependent reduction in CNS volume and appearance of neurodegenerative morphologies. For example, within the compound eye, one-day-old blue cheese mutant flies exhibit normal organization of ommatidia and retinal structures, but by 10 days of age, there is retinal degeneration, condensation of individual rhabdomeres and the appearance of large vacuoles between the ommatidia. Similar atrophy is detected in the central brain, although, interestingly, there is an apparent absence of significant vacuole formation. Many neurons in the blue cheese mutants ultimately undergo apoptotic cell death, as increased numbers of TUNEL-positive cells are detected within cortical regions of the CNS. The initial viability of blue cheese mutant adults implies that, at...  Read more
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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

Drosophila used for experiments.

Western blots were probed sequentially with anti-ubiquitin (1:1000 dilution; Zymed Laboratories), anti-histone 2B (1:500 dilution; James Kadonaga, University of California), and anti-BCHS (1:200 dilution) antibodies with the use of standard techniques. For fluorescence confocal microscopy Drosphila brains were incubated in ubiquitin monoclonal antibody (1:100 dilution; Zymed Laboratories) and/or APPL antibody (preabsorbed, 1:2000 dilution; Kalpana White, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA).

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