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Dive into the research topics where David H. Hall is active.

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Featured researches published by David H. Hall.


Neuron | 1990

The unc-5, unc-6, and unc-40 genes guide circumferential migrations of pioneer axons and mesodermal cells on the epidermis in C. elegans

Edward M. Hedgecock; Joseph G. Culotti; David H. Hall

Three known genes guide circumferential migrations of pioneer axons and mesodermal cells on the nematode body wall. unc-5 affects dorsal migrations, unc-40 primarily affects ventral migrations, and unc-6 affects migrations in both directions. Circumferential movements still occur, but are misdirected whereas longitudinal movements are normal in these mutants. Pioneer growth cones migrating directly on the epidermis are affected; growth cones migrating along established axon fascicles are normal. Thus these genes affect cell guidance and not cell motility per se. We propose that two opposite, adhesive gradients guide circumferential migrations on the epidermis. unc-5, unc-6, and unc-40 may encode these adhesion molecules or their cellular receptors. Neurons have access to the basal lamina and the basolateral surfaces of the epidermis, but mesodermal cells contact only the basal lamina. These genes probably identify molecular cues on the basal lamina that guide mesodermal migrations. The same basal lamina cues, or perhaps related molecules on the epidermal cell surfaces, guide pioneer neurons.


Nature | 2002

Stochastic and genetic factors influence tissue-specific decline in ageing C. elegans

Laura A. Herndon; Peter J. Schmeissner; Justyna M. Dudaronek; Paula Brown; Kristin M. Listner; Yuko Sakano; Marie C. Paupard; David H. Hall; Monica Driscoll

The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans is an important model for studying the genetics of ageing, with over 50 life-extension mutations known so far. However, little is known about the pathobiology of ageing in this species, limiting attempts to connect genotype with senescent phenotype. Using ultrastructural analysis and visualization of specific cell types with green fluorescent protein, we examined cell integrity in different tissues as the animal ages. We report remarkable preservation of the nervous system, even in advanced old age, in contrast to a gradual, progressive deterioration of muscle, resembling human sarcopenia. The age-1(hx546) mutation, which extends lifespan by 60–100%, delayed some, but not all, cellular biomarkers of ageing. Strikingly, we found strong evidence that stochastic as well as genetic factors are significant in C. elegans ageing, with extensive variability both among same-age animals and between cells of the same type within individuals.


Cell | 1991

Kinesin-related gene unc-104 is required for axonal transport of synaptic vesicles in C. elegans

David H. Hall; Edward M. Hedgecock

unc-104 encodes a novel kinesin paralog that may act as a microtubule-based motor in the nervous system. Neuronal cell lineages and axonogenesis are normal in unc-104 null mutants, but axons have few synaptic vesicles and make only a few small synapses. By contrast, neuron cell bodies have surfeits of similar vesicles tethered together within the cytoplasm. Based on behavioral and cellular phenotypes, we suggest that UNC-104 is a neuron-specific motor used for anterograde translocation of synaptic vesicles along axonal microtubules. Other membrane-bounded organelles are transported normally.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2011

Structural Properties of the Caenorhabditis elegans Neuronal Network

Lav R. Varshney; Beth L. Chen; Eric Paniagua; David H. Hall; Dmitri B. Chklovskii

Despite recent interest in reconstructing neuronal networks, complete wiring diagrams on the level of individual synapses remain scarce and the insights into function they can provide remain unclear. Even for Caenorhabditis elegans, whose neuronal network is relatively small and stereotypical from animal to animal, published wiring diagrams are neither accurate nor complete and self-consistent. Using materials from White et al. and new electron micrographs we assemble whole, self-consistent gap junction and chemical synapse networks of hermaphrodite C. elegans. We propose a method to visualize the wiring diagram, which reflects network signal flow. We calculate statistical and topological properties of the network, such as degree distributions, synaptic multiplicities, and small-world properties, that help in understanding network signal propagation. We identify neurons that may play central roles in information processing, and network motifs that could serve as functional modules of the network. We explore propagation of neuronal activity in response to sensory or artificial stimulation using linear systems theory and find several activity patterns that could serve as substrates of previously described behaviors. Finally, we analyze the interaction between the gap junction and the chemical synapse networks. Since several statistical properties of the C. elegans network, such as multiplicity and motif distributions are similar to those found in mammalian neocortex, they likely point to general principles of neuronal networks. The wiring diagram reported here can help in understanding the mechanistic basis of behavior by generating predictions about future experiments involving genetic perturbations, laser ablations, or monitoring propagation of neuronal activity in response to stimulation.


Neuron | 1998

Active Currents Regulate Sensitivity and Dynamic Range in C. elegans Neurons

Miriam B. Goodman; David H. Hall; Leon Avery; Shawn R. Lockery

Little is known about the physiology of neurons in Caenorhabditis elegans. Using new techniques for in situ patch-clamp recording in C. elegans, we analyzed the electrical properties of an identified sensory neuron (ASER) across four developmental stages and 42 unidentified neurons at one stage. We find that ASER is nearly isopotential and fails to generate classical Na+ action potentials. Rather, ASER displays a high sensitivity to input currents coupled to a depolarization-dependent reduction in sensitivity that may endow ASER with a wide dynamic range. Voltage clamp revealed depolarization-activated K+ and Ca2+ currents that contribute to high sensitivity near the zero-current potential. The depolarization-dependent reduction in sensitivity can be attributed to activation of K+ current at voltages where it dominates the net membrane current. The voltage dependence of membrane current was similar in all neurons examined, suggesting that C. elegans neurons share a common mechanism of sensitivity and dynamic range.


Current Biology | 2001

The Caenorhabditis elegans autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease gene homologs lov-1 and pkd-2 act in the same pathway

Maureen M. Barr; Douglas Braun; Can Q. Nguyen; David H. Hall; Paul W. Sternberg

Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) strikes 1 in 1000 individuals and often results in end-stage renal failure. Mutations in either PKD1 or PKD2 account for 95% of all cases [1-3]. It has recently been demonstrated that polycystin-1 and polycystin-2 (encoded by PKD1 and PKD2, respectively) assemble to form a cation channel in vitro [4]. Here we determine that the Caenorhabditis elegans PKD1 and PKD2 homologs, lov-1 [5] and pkd-2, act in the same pathway in vivo. Mutations in either lov-1 or pkd-2 result in identical male sensory behavioral defects. Also, pkd-2;lov-1 double mutants are no more severe than either of the single mutants, indicating that lov-1 and pkd-2 act together. LOV-1::GFP and PKD-2::GFP are expressed in the same male-specific sensory neurons and are concentrated in cilia and cell bodies. Cytoplasmic, nonnuclear staining in cell bodies is punctate, suggesting that one pool of PKD-2 is localized to intracellular membranes while another is found in sensory cilia. In contrast to defects in the C. elegans autosomal recessive PKD gene osm-5 [6-8], the cilia of lov-1 and pkd-2 single mutants and of lov-1;pkd-2 double mutants are normal as judged by electron microscopy, demonstrating that lov-1 and pkd-2 are not required for ultrastructural development of male-specific sensory cilia.


Nature Cell Biology | 2001

Cooperative regulation of AJM-1 controls junctional integrity in Caenorhabditis elegans epithelia

Mathias Köppen; Jeffrey S. Simske; Paul A. Sims; Bonnie L. Firestein; David H. Hall; Anthony D. Radice; Christopher Rongo; Jeff Hardin

The function of epithelial cell sheets depends on the integrity of specialized cell–cell junctions that connect neighbouring cells. We have characterized the novel coiled-coil protein AJM-1, which localizes to an apical junctional domain of Caenorhabditis elegans epithelia basal to the HMR–HMP (cadherin–catenin) complex. In the absence of AJM-1, the integrity of this domain is compromised. Proper AJM-1 localization requires LET-413 and DLG-1, homologues of the Drosophila tumour suppressors Scribble and Discs large, respectively. DLG-1 physically interacts with AJM-1 and is required for its normal apical distribution, and LET-413 mediates the rapid accumulation of both DLG-1 and AJM-1 in the apical domain. In the absence of both dlg-1 and let-413 function AJM-1 is almost completely lost from apical junctions in embryos, whereas HMP-1 (α-catenin) localization is only mildly affected. We conclude that LET-413 and DLG-1 cooperatively control AJM-1 localization and that AJM-1 controls the integrity of a distinct apical junctional domain in C. elegans.


Nature Cell Biology | 2001

Evidence that RME-1, a conserved C. elegans EH-domain protein, functions in endocytic recycling.

Barth D. Grant; Yinhua Zhang; Marie-Christine Paupard; Sharron X. Lin; David H. Hall; David Hirsh

In genetic screens for new endocytosis genes in Caenorhabditis elegans we identified RME-1, a member of a conserved class of Eps15-homology (EH)-domain proteins. Here we show that RME-1 is associated with the periphery of endocytic organelles, which is consistent with a direct role in endocytic transport. Endocytic defects in rme-1 mutants indicate that the protein is likely to have a function in endocytic recycling. Evidence from studies of mammalian RME-1 also points to a function for RME-1 in recycling, specifically in the exit of membrane proteins from recycling endosomes. These studies show a conserved function in endocytic recycling for the RME-1 family of EH proteins.


Science | 2012

The Connectome of a Decision-Making Neural Network

Travis A. Jarrell; Yi Wang; Adam Bloniarz; Christopher A. Brittin; Meng Xu; J. Nichol Thomson; Donna G. Albertson; David H. Hall; Scott W. Emmons

The Male Wiring Diagram The function of the nervous system is thought to represent an emergent property of its network connectivity. However, there are few complete descriptions of all the physical connections between neurons within a real nervous system. Working in nematodes, Jarrell et al. (p. 437; see the Perspective by Chklovskii and Bargmann) identified the complete connectome—every single chemical and gap junction synapse—of the tail ganglia, which govern mating behavior. The complete wiring structure of the synaptic network governing mating behavior of male nematodes is revealed. In order to understand the nervous system, it is necessary to know the synaptic connections between the neurons, yet to date, only the wiring diagram of the adult hermaphrodite of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans has been determined. Here, we present the wiring diagram of the posterior nervous system of the C. elegans adult male, reconstructed from serial electron micrograph sections. This region of the male nervous system contains the sexually dimorphic circuits for mating. The synaptic connections, both chemical and gap junctional, form a neural network with four striking features: multiple, parallel, short synaptic pathways directly connecting sensory neurons to end organs; recurrent and reciprocal connectivity among sensory neurons; modular substructure; and interneurons acting in feedforward loops. These features help to explain how the network robustly and rapidly selects and executes the steps of a behavioral program on the basis of the inputs from multiple sensory neurons.


Methods in Cell Biology | 1995

ELECTRON MICROSCOPY AND THREE-DIMENSIONAL IMAGE RECONSTRUCTION

David H. Hall

Publisher Summary This chapter focuses on the electron microscopy studies of Caenorhabditis elegans. The chapter discusses the methods for three-dimensional (3D) image reconstruction, based largely on film techniques introduced by John White and Randle Ware. Digital imaging techniques seem poised to make 3D reconstruction more accessible and may simplify the exchange of morphological data between laboratories. Several specialized specimen preparation techniques for electron microscopy, including freeze fracture and electron microscopic immunocytochemistry are described. The chapter outlines the methods making it feasible to collect hundreds of micrographs of cells or cell processes from a serially sectioned nematode. After assembling an ordered collection of negatives, all produced at one magnification, it is desired to view them sequentially in a well-aligned “movie” through the specimen. It can be quickly comprehended and can trace the continuity of individual processes as they course through a nerve bundle from a movie, even when the registration of profiles from print to print is difficult to discern.

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Ken C.Q. Nguyen

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Zeynep F. Altun

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Laura A. Herndon

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

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