Reactive oxygen (RO) has been identified as an important effector in ageing and lifespan determination. The specific cell types, however, in which oxidative damage acts to limit lifespan of the whole organism have not been explicitly identified. The association between mutations in the gene encoding the oxygen radical metabolizing enzyme CuZn superoxide dismutase (SOD1) and loss of motorneurons in the brain and spinal cord that occurs in the life-shortening paralytic disease, Familial Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (FALS; ref. 4), suggests that chronic and unrepaired oxidative damage occurring specifically in motor neurons could be a critical causative factor in ageing. To test this hypothesis, we generated transgenic Drosophila which express human SOD1 specifically in adult motorneurons. We show that overexpression of a single gene, SOD1, in a single cell type, the motorneuron, extends normal lifespan by up to 40% and rescues the lifespan of a short-lived Sod null mutant. Elevated resistance to oxidative stress suggests that the lifespan extension observed in these flies is due to enhanced RO metabolism. These results show that SOD activity in motorneurons is an important factor in ageing and lifespan determination in Drosophila.
The availability of monoclonal antibodies has revived interest in immunotherapy. The ability to influence an individual's immune state by administering immunoglobulin of the appropriate specificity may provide a powerful approach to disease control and prevention. Compared with immunoglobulin from other species, human immunoglobulin (Ig) might be best for such therapeutic intervention; it might function better with the recipient's effector cells and should itself be less immunogenic. The success of the mouse hybridoma system suggests that immunoglobulin of virtually any specificity can be obtained from a properly immunized animal. In the human system, however, immunization protocols are restricted by ethical considerations, and it is not yet clear whether human antibody-producing cell lines of the required specificity can be obtained from adventitiously immunized individuals or from in vitro immunized cells. A method which might circumvent these difficulties is to produce antibodies consisting of mouse variable regions joined to human constant regions. Therefore, we have constructed immunoglobulin genes in which the DNA segments encoding mouse variable regions specific for the hapten trinitrophenyl (TNP) are joined to segments encoding human mu and kappa constant regions. These 'chimaeric' genes are expressed as functional TNP-binding chimaeric IgM. We report here some of the properties of this novel IgM.
We have used the green fluorescent protein (GFP) from the jellyfish Aequorea victoria as a vital marker/reporter in Drosophila melanogaster. Transgenic flies were generated in which GFP was expressed under the transcriptional control of the yeast upstream activating sequence that is recognized by GAL4. These flies were crossed to several GAL4 enhancer trap lines, and expression of GFP was monitored in a variety of tissues during development using confocal microscopy. Here, we show that GFP could be detected in freshly dissected ovaries, imaginal discs, and the larval nervous system without prior fixation or the addition of substrates or antibodies. We also show that expression of GFP could be monitored in intact living embryos and larvae and in cultured egg chambers, allowing us to visualize dynamic changes in gene expression during real time.
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