Frazzled Protein Key to Neural Wiring and Synapse Speed in Drosophila Study

October 31, 2025
Frazzled Protein Key to Neural Wiring and Synapse Speed in Drosophila Study
  • In Drosophila’s Giant Fiber System, loss or mutation of Frazzled weakens gap junctions, delays neural responses, and reduces muscle control due to impaired electrical coupling.

  • Frazzled, a DCC-like protein in mammals, serves a dual role in neural development by guiding neurons to targets and controlling synapse formation.

  • Researchers plan to investigate whether these mechanisms operate in mammals and other organisms and how Frazzled-related pathways affect broader CNS processes.

  • Collaborators include Juan Lopez (first author) and Rodney Murphey (senior author) from FAU, with a team across FAU’s imaging and biology departments.

  • Frazzled’s intracellular portion rescues both the wiring of synapses and the speed of neural communication, signaling that Frazzled’s regulation of gene activity is essential for forming functional gap junctions.

  • The project features contributions from Juan Lopez and Rodney Murphey as core FAU investigators, with co-authors spanning imaging and biology groups.

  • Lead investigator Murphey emphasizes a combined experimental and computational approach to reveal how Frazzled shapes neural connections, with future work exploring mammalian relevance and implications for learning, memory, and neural repair.

  • Findings point to a conserved, broader role for Frazzled-like pathways across species in shaping neural networks and potentially informing neural development, learning, memory, and injury repair.

  • Evidence suggests conservation of these mechanisms across species, with potential relevance to mammalian neural circuits and cognitive functions.

  • The study highlights cross-species conservation and implications for learning, memory, and recovery after neural injury.

  • The research integrated genetics, imaging, physiology, and computational modeling to dissect how Frazzled shapes both physical wiring and functional connectivity.

  • The work appears in eNeuro, volume 12, issue 10, 2025, under a title addressing Frazzled and neural wiring in Drosophila.

  • A computational model of the Giant Fiber system shows that even small changes in gap junction density can strongly affect firing reliability and speed, aligning with experimental results.

  • Combining experiments and modeling demonstrates that alterations in gap junction density materially impact the speed and precision of neural signaling.

  • Overall, the integrated approach supports that gap junction density is a key determinant of neural signaling dynamics in the Giant Fiber system.

Summary based on 4 sources


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