Muscle-fiber specific genetic manipulation of Drosophila sallimus severely impacts neuromuscular development, morphology, and physiology

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Abstract

The ability of skeletal muscles to contract is derived from the unique genes and proteins expressed within muscles, most notably myofilaments and elastic proteins. Here we investigated the role of the sallimus ( sls ) gene, which encodes a structural homologue of titin, in regulating development, structure, and function of Drosophila melanogaster . Ubiquitous knockdown of sls using RNA interference (RNAi) in all muscle fibers resulted in embryonic lethality. A screen for muscle-specific drivers revealed a Gal4 line that expresses in a single larval body wall muscle in each abdominal hemisegment. Disrupting sls expression in single muscle fibers did not impact egg or larval viability nor gross larval morphology, but did significantly alter the morphology of individual muscle fibers. Analysis of individual sarcomeres revealed significant changes in ultrastructural organization, dramatically increasing sarcomere, I-band, A-band, and sls -band lengths. Surprisingly, muscle-cell specific disruption of sls also severely impacted neuromuscular junction (NMJ) formation. The extent of motor-neuron (MN) innervation along disrupted muscles was significantly reduced along with the number of glutamatergic boutons, in MN-Is and MN-Ib. Electrophysiological recordings revealed a 40% reduction in excitatory junctional potentials correlating with the extent of motor neuron loss. Analysis of active zone (AZ) composition revealed changes in presynaptic scaffolding protein (brp) abundance, but no changes in postsynaptic glutamate receptors. Ultrastructural changes in muscle and NMJ development at these single muscle fibers were sufficient to lead to observable changes in neuromuscular transduction and ultimately, locomotory behavior.

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