Frontiers in Neural Circuits (Mar 2010)

The enigma of store-operated Ca<sup style='font-size:13px;'>2+</sup>-entry in neurons: answers from the <i>Drosophila</i> flight circuit

  • Gaiti Hasan,
  • Gayatri Venkiteswaran

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fncir.2010.00010
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

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In neurons a well-defined source of signaling Ca2+ is the extracellular medium. However, as in all metazoan cells, Ca2+ is also stored in endoplasmic reticular compartments inside neurons. The relevance of these stores in neuronal function has been debatable. The Orai gene encodes a channel that helps refill these stores from the extracellular medium in non-excitable cells through a process called store-operated Ca2+ entry or SOCE. Recent findings have shown that raising the level of Orai or its activator STIM, and consequently SOCE in neurons, can restore flight to varying extents to Drosophila mutants for an intracellular Ca2+-release channel – the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor (InsP3R). Both intracellular Ca2+-release and SOCE appear to function in neuro-modulatory domains of the flight circuit during development and acute flight. These findings raise exciting new possibilities for the role of SOCE in vertebrate motor circuit function and the treatment of neurodegenerative disorders where intracellular Ca2+ signaling has been implicated as causative.

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