Abstract
The Drosophila Ncc69 gene encodes a Na+-K+-2Cl−-cotransporter (NKCC) that is critical for regulating intra- and extracellular ionic conditions in different tissues. Here, we show that the Ncc69 transporter is necessary for fly vision and that its expression is required non-autonomously in glia to maintain visual synaptic transmission. Flies mutant for Ncc69 exhibit normal photoreceptor depolarization in response to a light pulse but lack the ON and OFF-transients characteristic of postsynaptic responses of lamina neurons, indicating a failure in synaptic transmission. We also find that synaptic transmission requires the Ncc69 regulatory kinases WNK and Fray in glia. The ERG phenotype is associated with a defect in the recycling of the histamine neurotransmitter. Ncc69 mutants exhibit higher levels of the transport metabolite carcinine in lamina cartridges, with its accumulation most intense in the extracellular space. Our work reveals a novel role of glial NKCC transporters in synaptic transmission, possibly through regulating extracellular ionic conditions.
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Introduction
Neuronal activity is defined by ionic flux. Coordinated control of ion gradients is therefore critical for brain function, and failure of such control leads to neurological diseases, including seizures, schizophrenia, and neuropathic pain1,2,3. Glia isolate neurons from surrounding chemistries4 and buffer the sudden ionic flux that accompanies neurotransmission5,6. Important contributors to this homeostatic regulation are the K+-Cl− cotransporters (KCCs) and Na+-K+-2Cl− cotransporters (NKCCs)2,7,8. These cation-chloride cotransporters (CCCs) function as secondary active symporters that utilize Na+ or K+ gradients to drive Cl− movement. Under the typical ionic conditions generated by the Na+/K+-ATPase, the NKCCs are positioned for ionic import while KCCs drive export3,9.
Accordingly, NKCCs and KCCs are subject to functionally opposing posttranslational modifications. The family of with-no-lysine(K) or WNK kinases phosphorylate the STE20/SPS-related proline/alanine-rich kinase (SPAK) and Oxidative stress response 1 (OSR1) kinases, thereby activating them. Activated SPAK/OSR1, or Fray in Drosophila10, phosphorylate NKCCs and KCCs, which leads to their activation and deactivation respectively1. The regulatory function of this module is conserved in Drosophila: WNK and the SPAK/OSR1 homolog Fray regulate the NKCC1 homolog Ncc6910,11,12,13,14,15.
In the Drosophila peripheral nervous system, glial CCCs control the ionic environment in larval nerves13,16. Nevertheless, loss of Ncc69 function had little impact on neuronal function, except a slightly increased seizure susceptibility16. Here, we explore the role of the WNK-Fray-Ncc69 module in the context of the visual system (Fig. 1a). Drosophila photoreceptors use histamine as neurotransmitter17,18. Histamine synthesis in photoreceptor neurons is insufficient to sustain their high rate of synaptic release, and therefore histamine recycling is critical for normal vision19. Upon light activation of photoreceptors, synaptic release of histamine opens histamine-gated chloride channels in postsynaptic lamina neurons, causing their hyperpolarization20. These synapses are organized in cartridges21, each containing six photoreceptor axons and the dendrites of postsynaptic lamina neurons. Individual cartridges are ensheathed by a set of three astrocyte-like glia that recycle histamine neurotransmitter (Fig. 1b) and isolate individual cartridges19,22,23. Our data indicate that the module consisting of the sodium potassium chloride symporter, Ncc69, and its regulatory kinase cascade is necessary in glia for Drosophila vision.
Results
Ncc69 is required for photoreceptor neurotransmission
To examine a role for Ncc69 in visual neurotransmission, we used electroretinograms (ERGs) to measure the sustained negative potential (SNP) of photoreceptor depolarization in response to a light pulse and the postsynaptic responses from lamina neurons, known as ON- and OFF transients, that correspond to the initiation and termination of a light pulse, respectively (Fig. 1c). ERG recordings of flies homozygous for the two strong loss-of-function alleles Ncc69r1 and Ncc69r2 12,13 revealed severely reduced ON and OFF transients, indicating a disruption in neurotransmission (Fig. 1d–f). Disruption of neurotransmission was independent of the function of white (w), which is required for eye pigmentation and is known to affect various aspects of Drosophila vision24. Of note, compared to controls, none of these genotypes displayed significantly reduced SNPs (Fig. 1f), irrespective of intensity of the light pulse (Fig. 1g), indicating that loss of Ncc69 did not affect the ability of photoreceptor neurons to depolarize in response to light.
To test the behavioral consequences of loss of Ncc69 function, we employed an automated ‘startle-response’ assay. Once adapted to the dark for 2 hours, wild-type flies, but not histamine-recycling defective carT43A mutants25, responded to a short light pulse with elevated motor activity (Fig. 2a,c). Similarly, loss of Ncc69 function eliminated the light-evoked startle response (Fig. 2b,c). Together with the ERG findings, these data indicate that Ncc69 function is required for normal visual responses.
To further assess the health of the visual circuit in Ncc69 mutants, we stained wild-type and Ncc69r2 cryosections for the pre-synaptic marker Bruchpilot. Within the lamina region, marked by co-staining for the glial-specific enzyme Ebony, synaptic density and distribution were similar in flies lacking Ncc69 compared to wild-type controls (Fig. 3a). In addition, electron micrographs of the lamina region (Fig. 3b) demonstrated that overall cartridge organization was unaltered, including T-bars, capitate projections, and synaptic vesicles. Interestingly, cross-sectional areas of L1 and L2 dendrites were increased (Fig. 3c). This increase is reminiscent of the role of Ncc69 in volume regulation in larval abdominal nerves. In larval peripheral nerves, however, the major volume changes affected the extracellular fluid between glia and axons13. Such extracellular fluid accumulation was not detected in the visual system, suggesting that different physiological consequences result from loss of Ncc69 function, depending on cellular context.
Ncc69 is expressed in glia
In larvae, Ncc69 expression is highest in glia13. Cryosections of adult wild-type brains showed that Ncc69 was highly expressed in the lamina (Fig. 4a); specificity of antibody staining was confirmed by reduced Ncc69 levels in Ncc69r1 and its absence in Ncc69r2 mutants (Fig. 4b,c). Ncc69r2 mutants were used for all further analysis. In the retina or lamina, Ncc69 exhibited only little co-localization with GFP expressed under the control of the photoreceptor-specific 3xPax3 promoter (Fig. 4e). To further examine localization of Ncc69 within specific cell types, we utilized the Gal4/UAS system to express a membrane-bound mCD8::GFP in photoreceptor neurons via the longGMR-Gal4 driver (Fig. 4f) or in glia via the repo-GAL4 driver (Fig. 4g). Ncc69 antibody staining largely overlapped with lamina glia. Interestingly, compared to the epithelial glia present throughout the lamina26, Ncc69 was enriched in the more distal regions of the lamina which house satellite glia (Fig. 4d). This observation was confirmed by Ncc69 antibody staining of brains expressing mCD8::GFP under control of mz0709-Gal4 (Fig. 4h), a driver expressed in marginal and satellite glia27,28. Taken together these data indicate that Ncc69 is expressed at high levels in multiple glial sub-types within the lamina.
Glial-specific requirement for Ncc69
To identify which cell types require Ncc69 for normal neurotransmission, we performed ERG analysis on flies expressing an RNAi transgene targeting the Ncc69 transcript. Consistent with the localization studies, ERG components were unaltered when Ncc69-RNAi was expressed in photoreceptor neurons via GMR-Gal4 (Fig. 5a,b) or pan-neuronally via elav-Gal4, indicating that Ncc69 is not necessary in photoreceptors or post-synaptic L1/2 neurons (Fig. 5a,b). By contrast, pan-glial knockdown of Ncc69 by repo-Gal4-driven Ncc69-RNAi (Supplemental Fig. 1c) caused loss of ON- and OFF transients, phenocopying Ncc69 null alleles (Fig. 5a,b). Surprisingly, Ncc69 knockdown using Gal4 drivers specific for epithelial glia or other subsets of glia (as indicated with arrows in Supplemental Fig. S1c) did not cause consistent loss of ON and OFF transients (Supplemental Fig. S1a,b) in contrast to the pan-glial repo-Gal4-driven knockdown. Because low levels of Ncc69 could still be detected after knockdown with some of these drivers, we cannot distinguish whether the remaining Ncc69 protein is sufficient in the critical cell types or whether Ncc69 expression in a subset of glia is sufficient to control ionic conditions in the extracellular milieu of the lamina.
To determine whether glial expression of Ncc69 in an otherwise Ncc69 mutant background was sufficient to restore normal visual neurotransmission, we tested whether the Ncc69r2 phenotype could be rescued by cell type-specific expression of Ncc69. Glial-specific expression of Ncc69 under control of gliotactin (Gli)-Gal429,30 (Supplemental Fig. 2) was sufficient to restore ON- and OFF transient defects of Ncc69r2 mutants (Fig. 5a,b). Importantly, glial-specific Ncc69 rescue also restored the behavioral response to light startle (Fig. 2b,c). Taken together, these data indicate that Ncc69 is necessary at least in some subset of glia, but not neurons, for proper visual neurotransmission.
As glial Ncc69 function has previously been linked to volume control13, we wondered whether the increased L1/L2 dendritic area (Fig. 3b,c) contributed to the loss of ON- and OFF transients. Interestingly, glial-specific expression of Ncc69 (Supplemental Fig. 2) rescued neurotransmission (Fig. 5a,b), but failed to restore the increased L1/L2 dendritic area of Ncc69r2 flies to wild-type levels (Fig. 5c). Furthermore, the increase in Ncc69r2 L1/L2 dendritic area was phenocopied by pan-neuronal expression of Ncc69-RNAi (Fig. 5c), despite normal ON- and OFF transients (Fig. 5a,b). These data functionally uncouple the L1/L2 volume changes from the loss of ON- and OFF transients and indicate that these L1/L2-specific changes are not critical for the loss of neurotransmission.
Glial-specific knockdown of WNK and Fray kinases phenocopies Ncc69 loss-of-function
Further support for the role of glia in Ncc69-mediated transport came from studies of the regulatory Fray and WNK kinases. Like their mammalian homologs1, Drosophila WNK kinase phosphorylates Fray31,32, which in turn phosphorylates Ncc69 and activates its Na+/K+/2Cl− import activity10,33. To test whether this regulatory WNK-Fray-Ncc69 cassette is also critical in the Drosophila visual system, we knocked down Fray or WNK in glia using the repo-Gal4 driver and RNAi transgenes, because null alleles for both kinases are lethal14,32,34. Consistent with their known role of regulating Ncc69 in larval glia and in other tissues10,13,33, glial-specific knockdown of either WNK or Fray phenocopied Ncc69 with regard to loss of ON and OFF transients (Fig. 6a,b). These data are consistent with a requirement for the WNK-Fray-Ncc69 cassette for proper neurotransmission in the Drosophila visual system.
Mammalian WNKs rescue Drosophila neurotransmission defects
The Drosophila genome contains a single WNK homolog while mammalian genomes, including the human genome, contain four homologs. To test whether mammalian WNKs are functionally conserved in the context of Drosophila vision, we examined the ability of mammalian WNK homologs to rescue the ERG defects seen upon glial-specific knockdown of Drosophila WNK. To achieve this, we used repo-Gal4 to drive expression of either UAS-mammalian WNK alone or in combination with UAS-WNK-RNAi. Importantly, the WNK RNAi transgene targets the Drosophila transcript outside of the highly conserved kinase domain in a region sufficiently divergent from the mammalian WNK transcripts to avoid their degradation. Expression of mammalian WNK in an otherwise wild-type background did not interfere with ERG components, with the exception of WNK2 overexpression, which caused a slight but significant reduction in ON- and OFF transients (Fig. 6c,d). However, when expressed in the presence of glia-specific Drosophila WNK knockdown, all four mammalian WNK homologs restored both ON- and OFF transients (Fig. 6c,d), consistent with a potential WNK-Fray-Ncc69 regulatory cassette being required in glia for visual neurotransmission.
Carcinine accumulates in Ncc69 mutant lamina
One mechanism by which lamina glial cells contribute to Drosophila vision is the recycling of histamine neurotransmitter (Fig. 1b). Mutations in the enzymatic or transport components necessary for histamine recycling are known to inhibit visual neurotransmission and redistribute histamine neurotransmitter, or its transport metabolite carcinine, in the retina and lamina24,25,35,36,37,38,39,40. To test whether loss of Ncc69 impacts this histamine-carcinine cycle, we performed immunofluorescence staining for these two metabolites. Ncc69r2 mutants displayed no detectable accumulation of histamine in retina or lamina when compared to wild-type (Fig. 7a). By contrast, carcinine levels were increased in Ncc69r2 lamina (Fig. 7b, arrows). Importantly, wild-type carcinine distribution was restored in Ncc69r2 flies expressing a UAS-Ncc69.HA transgene specifically in glial cells (Fig. 7b,c). In addition, knockdown of Ncc69 specifically in glia, using repo-Gal4 to drive UAS-Ncc69-RNAi, was sufficient to increase carcinine levels (Fig. 7c,d). In order to determine the location of carcinine buildup within the lamina, we marked either photoreceptors with 3xPax3-GFP (Supplemental Fig. S3a) or glial cells with repo-Gal4-driven membrane bound mCD8::GFP (Fig. 7d) or cytoplasmic tdGFP (Supplemental Fig. S3b). These cellular markers showed only a low degree of colocalization with carcinine that accumulated in the lamina upon Ncc69 knockdown in glia (insets in Fig. 7d, Supplemental Fig. S3a,b). Furthermore, high resolution Airyscan images detected carcinine accumulations in Ncc69r2 lamina cartridges with the most pronounced buildups not colocalizing with either staining for Black marking glia41 or for Dlg marking photoreceptor axons42 (arrows in Fig. 7e, middle). While the exact distribution of carcinine was somewhat variable in these different backgrounds, its extracellular accumulation was consistently observed upon loss of Ncc69 function. This extracellular carcinine accumulation indicates that one of the consequences of loss of Ncc69 function is impaired carcinine uptake into photoreceptor axons.
To examine a possible contribution of this altered carcinine distribution to the Ncc69 ERGs phenotype, we performed ERGs on Ncc69r2 flies fed histamine or carcinine. Loss of histidine decarboxylase (Hdc), the enzyme responsible for histamine neurotransmitter synthesis, blocks ON- and OFF transients, but these components can be restored with either histamine or carcinine feeding (Fig. 7f). Importantly, Ziegler et al.41 have shown that restoration of visual neurotransmission of Hdc mutants by histamine feeding requires Ebony, indicating supplemented histamine is shuttled through the same glia-dependent histamine-carcinine cycle as synaptically released histamine. Unlike Hdc mutants, dietary histamine or carcinine did not significantly restore ON- or OFF-transients in Ncc69r2 flies, consistent with an impairment in the glia-dependent histamine-carcinine cycle (Fig. 7f).
The extracellular accumulation of carcinine suggests that loss of Ncc69 function may at least partially compromise CarT-mediated25,35,36 carcinine re-uptake into photoreceptor axons. This is unlikely to reflect a direct role of Ncc69 in carcinine transport into photoreceptor cells, given the Ncc69 requirement in glia. Consistent with this notion, we could not detect any uptake of carcinine into Ncc69-expressing S2 cells (data not shown) using the same assay that demonstrated CarT-mediated carcinine transport25,35,36.
CarT belongs to the Solute Linked Carrier 22 family of transporters, some of which operate as ion cotransporters43. To examine the ionic conditions necessary for CarT function we performed carcinine transport assays in the absence of Na+ or Cl− ions. To minimize indirect effects of altered ionic environments on S2 cells, we limited their exposure to these conditions to one hour. These carcinine transport assays showed that extracellular Na+, but not Cl−, was necessary for carcinine uptake (Fig. 8). This finding suggested that an altered perisynaptic ionic environment in Ncc69 lamina cartridges may contribute to the loss of visual neurotransmission in these mutants. Taken together, for the first time to our knowledge, we identify a role of glial Ncc69 in visual neurotransmission and in possibly establishing the ionic environment necessary in the perisynaptic space to promote the histamine-carcinine cycle.
Discussion
Na+-K+-2Cl−-cotransporters, like Ncc69, play a highly conserved role in regulating intracellular and extracellular ion concentrations in different cell types and tissues, ranging from kidneys to brains3,9,10,12,13,16,44,45,46. By utilizing the Drosophila visual system to further explore the role of Ncc69 in neuronal function, we discovered a novel role for glial Ncc69 in neurotransmission. Our data, coupled with observations in other systems7,9,13,14, indicate that, within the nervous system, distinct physiological consequences result from loss of Ncc69 function depending on cellular context. For example, glia-specific loss of Ncc69, despite being linked to an increased propensity of seizures16, did not affect action potential conduction or evoked post synaptic currents at larval neuromuscular junctions13. By contrast, our observations in the visual system indicate that glial loss of Ncc69 non-autonomously causes an almost complete loss of synaptic transmission to lamina neurons detected both behaviorally and via light-evoked ON- and OFF transients.
Changes in perisynaptic ion concentrations in the lamina are likely to have multiple consequences for the visual system. For example, excess extracellular K+ could depolarize the L1 and L2 laminar neurons, although the role of glial NKCC in perisynaptic K+ clearance has been controversial46,47. Alternatively, with altered extracellular Cl− concentrations, the histamine-triggered influx of Cl− into L1/2 lamina neurons20 could be compromised. In the extreme, altered Cl− gradients across neuronal membranes can even reverse the response to neurotransmitters, such as histamine, that act on ligand-gated chloride channels, as has been observed for the responses to GABA during brain development3. Such effects on the lamina neurons may contribute to the slight increase in the size of their dendrites, but it is important to note that we functionally separated this effect from the loss of synaptic transmission. Ncc69 knockdown in neurons caused increased dendrite size without an effect on ON- and OFF-transients, whereas neurotransmission of Ncc69 mutants, but not the size of L1/2 dendrites, was rescued by Gliotactin-Gal4-driven Ncc69 expression.
Gliotactin-Gal4 is expressed in perineurial and subperineurial glia which form the blood-brain barrier in Drosophila30,48. This is consistent with Ncc69, perhaps by raising Cl− or lowering K+, contributing to the distinct ionic conditions of the peri-synaptic hemolymph as compared to the higher hemolymph K+ concentrations outside the nervous system. These effects on local ion concentrations may indirectly also affect neurotransmitter recycling or L1/2 lamina neuron activity.
Glial cells of the lamina also play a critical role in the recycling of histamine, the neurotransmitter of Drosophila photoreceptor neurons19. Histamine recycling is essential for normal vision since the rate of histamine synthesis is insufficient to sustain the high rate of synaptic release49. Synaptically released histamine is taken up by glia where Ebony50 catalyzes the condensation reaction between β-alanine and histamine to yield carcinine (Fig. 1b). Carcinine serves as a transport metabolite for histamine: it is released from glia, taken up by photoreceptors through the CarT transporter25,35,36 and finally recycled to histamine by Tan-mediated hydrolysis51. The accumulation of extracellular carcinine as a consequence of the loss of glial Ncc69 coupled with the failure of CarT to transport carcinine under Na+ free-conditions suggests that carcinine uptake into neurons may rely on perisynaptic ionic conditions maintained by Ncc69. Interestingly, CarT is a member of the SLC22 family of transporters and previous work has shown Na+-dependent transport activity for at least two other members, SLC22A4 and SLC22A543.
At first glance the Na+-dependence of carcinine transport into photoreceptors may seem to predict increased carcinine clearance from the perisynaptic space in response to the loss of Ncc69-mediated Na+-import into glia. However, it is important to note that Ncc69 also transports K+ and Cl− ions and is functionally coupled to the activity of other transporters, channels and the Na+/K+ ATPase12,52. Signaling between neurons and glia is bidirectional, and the alteration of intracellular Cl− in glia through loss of Ncc69 could have secondary consequences on the release of glial transmitters that then influence neuronal behavior, in a carcinine-dependent or -independent manner53. Thus, the effect of loss of Ncc69 function on extracellular concentrations of ions are difficult to predict, and it is not clear whether the perisynaptic accumulation of carcinine is a direct or indirect consequence of altered ion conditions in the lamina. Furthermore, histamine distribution was not visibly altered in Ncc69r2 mutant heads, suggesting that the defect in carcinine uptake of Ncc69 mutants may only be partial and not sufficient to explain the strong loss of visual neurotransmission.
The use of histamine as neurotransmitter in Drosophila is not restricted to the visual system, but has also been observed in peripheral mechanosensitive neurons18 that appear to also share specific histamine re-uptake mechanisms with photoreceptors54. It is not known whether Ncc69- or CarT-dependent mechanisms are involved in histamine recycling in these peripheral mechanoreceptors. This prompted our use of the automated visual startle assay, first described by Ni and colleagues55, to assess the behavioral consequences of the loss of Ncc69 in the visual system. This assay avoids any possible interference from altered mechanosensation that occurs during the physical handling of flies in a T-maze or during countercurrent assay. Ncc69 mutant flies were unresponsive to the light pulse in the startle assay, similar to CarT mutants that are defective in histamine recycling. It is interesting, however, that this assay does not solely report on defects in compound eye signaling since NorpA flies, which lack significant visual responses from the compound eye due to the loss of phospholipase C activity56, still respond in the visual startle assay similar to wild-type flies55. This discrepancy suggests that the requirements for Ncc69 and CarT in this context are not restricted to neurotransmission from the canonical phototransduction pathway. Possibly, these transporters also contribute to histamine recycling and the functional output of the Rhodopsin7 and Cryptochrome-expressing pacemaker neurons in the central brain55. Furthermore, independently of the canonical PLC-beta encoded by NorpA, PLC-21C is required in light entrainment behavior mediated by Rh5 and Rh6 rhodopsins in R8 photoreceptor cells57. It is tempting to speculate that Ncc69-dependent synaptic transmission is required for one or more of these non-canonical phototransduction pathways leading to altered light-induced behavioral responses.
Ncc69-like loss of synaptic transmission was also observed when kinases WNK or Fray were depleted in glia cells, suggesting that this well-characterized phosphorylation cascade15 regulating Ncc69 activity is critical in visual glia for maintaining its function. Strikingly, we could rescue the loss of Drosophila WNK in glia cells with expression of any of the four mammalian WNKs. This suggests conservation of WNK function in regulating glial Ncc69. One possibility is that WNK acts as an ionic sensor10,15,58, to regulate Ncc69 and Cl−, K+ and Na+ in the lamina glia.
Our findings are the first to demonstrate a non-autonomous role for glial NKCC and the regulatory kinases WNK and Fray in synaptic transmission. Given the conservation of Ncc69 and its regulatory kinase cascade, and the observed rescue of Drosophila WNK depletion by the mammalian WNKs, it will be interesting to see whether such a glial role for NKCC transporters in neurotransmission and neurotransmitter recycling is conserved in the mammalian brain.
Methods
Fly work
Flies were maintained using standard conditions. Fly lines repo-Gal4 (BDSC_7415), longGMR-Gal4 (BDSC_8121), elav-Gal4 (BDSC_8760), HdcMB07212 (BDSC_25260), R10D10-Gal4 (BDSC_69558), R32H04-Gal4 (BDSC_49734), R29A12-Gal4 (BDSC_49478), and R19C02-Gal4 (BDSC_49282) were provided by the Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center. The mCD8-GFP and 3XPax3-GFP markers and the carT43A mutant have been described25. UAS-WNK-RNAi and UAS-fray-RNAi transgenes and their effectiveness in knocking down the relevant target have been described10. The UAS-Ncc69-RNAi line (VDRC KK106499) was obtained from the Vienna Drosophila Resource Center (VDRC). The Ncc69r1, Ncc69r2 and Gli-Gal4; UAS-Ncc69 flies13 were a gift from Dr. William Leiserson (Yale University, New Haven, CT). The MZ709-Gal4 line was a gift from Dr. Hong-Sheng Li (University of Massachusetts Medical Center, Worcester, MA).
Molecular Biology
All UAS-mammalian WNK transgenic lines were generated using the Gateway cloning method (ThermoFisher) with Platinum Pfx DNA polymerase (ThermoFisher 11708013), pENTR/D-TOPO Cloning Kit (ThermoFisher, K240020), LR Clonase II (ThermoFisher, 11791020), and the Gateway compatible destination vector pUASg.attB, obtained from Johannes Bischof and Konrad Basler (Zurich, Switzerland)59. Template vectors (pROSA-rWNK1.3, pCMV7.1-hWNK2, pCMV7.1-hWNK3.2 and pCMV5-mWNK4) were obtained from Chou-Long Huang (UT Southwestern, Dallas, TX). Mammalian WNK PCR amplicons were gel purified and incorporated into the attL containing entry vector pENTR via directional TOPO cloning per manufacturer’s protocol.
WNK1 primers used were 5′ CACCATGTCTGACGGCACCGCAGAG 3′ and 5′ GGTGGTCCGTAGGTTGGAAC 3′.
WNK2 primers used were 5′ CACCATGGACGGCGATGGCGGCCGCCGAG 3′ and 5′ GTCAGGCTTCTCACTCTCAGGATCTGG 3′.
WNK3 primers used were 5′ CACCATGGCCACTGATTCAGGGGATCCAGC 3′ and 5′ TTTAGGACCAGGAGGGATTGTGGCAGG 3′.
WNK4 primers used were 5′ CACCATGCTAGCACCTCGAAATACGGAGACTGG 3′ and 5′ CATCCTGCCAATATCCCCGGCGAATG 3′.
Full-length pENTR-WNK clones were then shuttled into the attR containing destination vector pUASg.attB by LR clonase reactions and sequences confirmed. Midiprep DNA was sent to Rainbow Transgenic Flies for microinjection into stock line #24483 (M[vas-int.D]ZH-2A, M[3xP3-RFP.attP]ZH-51D). Stocks for each transgenic line were generated from single male transformants, and confirmation of the UAS-transgenes was performed by sequence-specific primers. All transgenic WNK lines were outcrossed for 5 generations to the Rodan laboratory wBerlin genetic background.
Electroretinogram recordings
ERGs were recorded as previously described25. In brief, voltage measurements of immobilized female flies were recorded with electrodes containing 2 M NaCl placed on the corneal surface and inserted into the thorax. Measurements were filtered through an electrometer (IE-210; Warner Instruments), digitized with a Digidata 1440 A and MiniDigi 1B system (Molecular Devices), and recorded using Clampex 10.2 (Axon Instruments). Light pulses (1 s at 600 lux, unless otherwise noted) were computer controlled (MC1500; Schott). Five ERG recordings from at least ten flies were performed in triplicate and quantified with Clampfit software (Axon Instruments). Light intensities were measured using a Fisher Scientific Dual-Range Light Meter (Fisher scientific).
Light-startle behavior assay
The assay was adapted from a previously described method55. Flies were collected zero to one day post-eclosion and reared under a standard LD cycle for 3 days. 16 flies per genotype were placed into individual Drosophila Assay Monitoring (DAM) chambers (TriKinetics Inc, Waltham, MA). The DAM monitors were placed into a dark incubator at ZT4 for a 2-h dark adaptation period followed by a 5-min pulse of 500-lux light at ZT6. Fly motor activity was automatically recorded with a DAMSystem3.0 and DAMFileScan11.0 (TriKinetics Inc). Raw data were exported to Microsoft Excel and processed in GraphPad Prism. The change in activity following the light pulse was calculated as [mean beam breaks for 10 min. post-pulse] – [mean beam breaks for 10 min. pre-pulse]. Three independent technical replicas of 16 different flies each per genotype were performed on separate days. Dead flies and rare hyperactive outliers (greater than 3 standard deviations) were removed before final statistical analysis.
Histology
Fly heads were dissected in hemolymph-like solution60 to remove the proboscis and posterior cuticle, fixed either for 1 hour in 4% paraformaldehyde or 4 h in ice-cold 4% 1-ethyl-3-(-3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide (wt/vol, Sigma) in 0.1 M phosphate buffer solution, washed overnight in 25% (wt/vol) sucrose in phosphate buffer (pH 7.4), embedded in optimal cutting temperature compound, frozen in dry ice, and sectioned at 20-μm thickness on a cryostat microtome (Leica). Sections were incubated overnight with antibodies to histamine (1:1000, Sigma, cat# H7403 pre-absorbed with 200 µM carcinine) or carcinine (1:1000, Immunostar, cat# 22939 pre-absorbed with 200 µM histamine). Specificity of these stainings for histamine and carcinine was confirmed in ebony and tan mutants as described25. Other antibodies used include anti-Ebony (gift from Bernhard Hovemann39), anti-Black (gift from Bernhard Hovemann39), anti-Bruchpilot (nc82, Hybridoma Bank), anti-NCC69 (gift from Jim Turner, NIH)11, anti-DLG (4F3, Hybridoma Bank), and anti-GFP (GFP-1020, Aves Labs). Secondary antibodies were labeled with Alexa488 (1:500, Molecular Probes, cat# A-11008), Alexa568 (1:500, Molecular Probes, cat# A-11011), or Alexa647 (1:500, Molecular Probes A-21235). Where indicated, Topro-3 Iodide (Molecular Probes, T3605) was used to stain DNA. Images were captured using a Zeiss LSM510 confocal microscope with a 20 × NA 0.75 or a 63 × NA 1.4 lens on an inverted confocal microscope (LSM510 Meta; Carl Zeiss) at 21–23 °C or a 63 × NA 1.4 objective with Airyscan detector (LSM880, Airyscan; Carl Zeiss) at 23 °C. Images were processed in Zen Blue (Carl Zeiss) and ImageJ (NIH).
Electron microscopy
After removal of the proboscis and posterior cuticle, fly heads were fixed overnight at 4 °C in 2% paraformaldehyde, 2% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4. Heads were washed three times in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, followed by 3 washes in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate buffer. Fixed heads were embedded in 3% agarose, tissue samples were then rinsed in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate buffer and post-fixed in 1% osmium tetroxide and 0.8% potassium ferricyanide in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate buffer for 90 min at room temperature. After three rinses in water, they were en-bloc stained with 4% uranyl acetate in 50% ethanol for two hours, dehydrated with increasing concentrations of ethanol, transitioned into resin with propylene oxide, infiltrated with Embed-812 resin, and polymerized at 60 °C overnight. 550 nm sections were cut and stained with toluidine blue to confirm orientation and section depth. Cartridges sizes and L1/2 areas were measured from such thick sections for Fig. 5c. Some blocks were then thin sectioned at 70 nm with a diamond knife (Diatome) on a Leica Ultracut 6 ultramicrotome (Leica Microsystems) and collected onto formvar-coated, glow-discharged copper grids, post-stained with 2% aqueous uranyl acetate and lead citrate. Images were acquired on a Tecnai G2 spirit transmission electron microscope (FEI) equipped with a LaB6 source using a voltage of 120 kV. From such images cartridges sizes and L1/2 areas were measured for Fig. 2c.
Carcinine uptake experiments
Drosophila S2 cells were plated and transfected with pMT-Myc-CarT or the pMT-Myc-CarTdel as described25. Post 24-hour induction with CuSO4, cells were washed twice in either modified Schneider’s, Na+ free, or Cl− free media (Supplemental Table 1) as indicated and incubated with the respective media containing 0 µM or 200 µM carcinine for 1 hour. Cells were then transferred to ice and fixed with 4% ethyl-3-(-3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide (wt/vol, Sigma) in ice-cold 0.1 M phosphate buffer solution. Fixed cells were stained with Myc and carcinine antibodies as described25. Quantification was performed in ImageJ by normalizing the integrated density of the carcinine signal by that of the Myc signal. Media isotonicity was measured via a Vapro pressure osmometer (model 5520, Wescor).
Image Quantification
Cartridge area and combined L1 and L2 area measurements were obtained using Macnification software (Orbicule). Based on morphology, cartridge area was defined by the region contained within the outer most boundaries of the R1-6 photoreceptors axons. L1 and L2 area was identified by its central location within a cartridge and the lack of synaptic vesicles. Only cartridges with distinct morphological boundaries were analyzed, and for each genotype we analyzed at least 50 cartridges in two replicate experiments.
To quantify carcinine levels within the lamina, confocal stacks were imported to ImageJ (National Institutes of Health) and masks of the lamina region generated based on repo-Gal4 driven expression of UAS-mCD8::GFP. Integrated pixel intensities of carcinine immunoreactivity per unit area were determined from at least ten individual lamina per genotype.
Statistics
Statistical significance was determined using GraphPad Prism 6 to perform one-way ANOVA, followed by Tukey’s or Bonferroni’s for multiple comparisons or two-tailed Students t-test for pair-wise comparisons.
References
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Acknowledgements
We would like to thank the Krämer lab for helpful comments and the Bloomington Stock Center (supported by NIH P40OD018537), the Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project, the Drosophila Genomics Resource Center (supported by NIH grant 2P40OD010949), and the Vienna Drosophila Resource Center for fly stocks and reagents, Billy Leiserson (Yale University) for Ncc69 mutant and UAS-Ncc69 flies, Jim Turner (NIH) for the anti-Ncc69 antibody, Johannes Bischof and Konrad Basler (University of Zurich) for the pUASg.attB plasmid, and Chou-Long Huang (UT Southwestern) for the mammalian WNK cDNAs. We thank the Molecular and Cellular Imaging Facility at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical center for help with electron microscopy (NIH S10 OD020103). FlyBase provided important information used in this work. This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (EY010199 and GM120196) to H. K., and (DK091316 and DK110358) to A.R.R., core grant EY020799, NIDA T32-DA07290, Basic Science Training Program in Drug Abuse Research supporting D.S., and NIGMS T32-GM008203, Cell and Molecular Biology Training Grant supporting A.T.M., and from the American Heart Association (16CSA2853002 to A.R.R.).
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D.S., A.T.M., A.R.R. and H.K. designed the experiments and wrote the manuscript. J.S. and A.R.R. generated the mammalian W.N.K. transgenes. D.S. and A.T.M. performed all experiments. D.S., A.R.R. and H.K. wrote the manuscript. All authors commented on manuscript, data, and conclusions before submission.
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Stenesen, D., Moehlman, A.T., Schellinger, J.N. et al. The glial sodium-potassium-2-chloride cotransporter is required for synaptic transmission in the Drosophila visual system. Sci Rep 9, 2475 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-38850-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-38850-x
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