Abstract
Several novel synaptic proteins have been identified by monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) of the Würzburg hybridoma library generated against homogenized Drosophila brains, e.g. cysteine string protein, synapse-associated protein of 47 kDa, and Bruchpilot. However, at present no routine technique exists to identify the antigens of mAbs of our library that label only a small number of cells in the brain. Yet these antibodies can be used to reproducibly label and thereby identify these cells by immunohistochemical staining. Here we describe the staining patterns in the Drosophila brain for ten mAbs of the Würzburg hybridoma library. Besides revealing the neuroanatomical structure and distribution of ten different sets of cells we compare the staining patterns with those of antibodies against known antigens and GFP expression patterns driven by selected Gal4 lines employing regulatory sequences of neuronal genes. We present examples where our antibodies apparently stain the same cells in different Gal4 lines suggesting that the corresponding regulatory sequences can be exploited by the split-Gal4 technique for transgene expression exclusively in these cells. The detection of Gal4 expression in cells labeled by mAbs may also help in the identification of the antigens recognized by the antibodies which then in addition to their value for neuroanatomy will represent important tools for the characterization of the antigens. Implications and future strategies for the identification of the antigens are discussed.
Highlights
The concept of identifiable neurons represents a unique feature of invertebrate neuroscience
In some cases it has been possible to identify the proteins recognized by the antibodies, like cysteine string protein (CSP), synapse-associated protein of 47 kDa (SAP47), Bruchpilot (BRP), Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Substrate 15 (EPS15), Pigment Dispersing Factor (PDF) precursor
The number of lines expressing Gal4 in subsets of Drosophila brain neurons has been significantly increased by high-throughput approaches employing fragments of regulatory sequences of genes expressed in the nervous system [5,6]
Summary
The concept of identifiable neurons represents a unique feature of invertebrate neuroscience. These antibodies may attain particular importance when the same cells are independently labelled by antisera against known antigens, tissue in-situ hybridization, or by GFP expression in enhancer trap or gene trap lines.
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