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Dive into the research topics where Karl-Friedrich Fischbach is active.

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Featured researches published by Karl-Friedrich Fischbach.


Cell and Tissue Research | 1990

Neuronal architecture of the antennal lobe in Drosophila melanogaster

Reinhard F. Stocker; M. C. Lienhard; A. Borst; Karl-Friedrich Fischbach

SummaryComputer reconstruction of the antennal lobe of Drosophila melanogaster has revealed a total of 35 glomeruli, of which 30 are located in the periphery of the lobe and 5 in its center. Several prominent glomeruli are recognizable by their location, size, and shape; others are identifiable only by their positions relative to prominent glomeruli. No obvious sexual dimorphism of the glomerular architecture was observed. Golgi impregnations revealed: (1) Five of the glomeruli are exclusive targets for ipsilateral antennal input, whereas all others receive afferents from both antennae. Unilateral amputation of the third antennal segment led to a loss of about 1000 fibers in the antennal commissure. Hence, about 5/6 of the approximately 1200 antennal afferents per side have a process that extends into the contralateral lobe. (2) Afferents from maxillary palps (most likely from basiconic sensilla) project into both ipsi-and contralateral antennal lobes, yet their target glomeruli are apparently not the same as those of antennal basiconic sensilla. (3) Afferents in the antennal lobe may also stem from pharyngeal sensilla. (4) The most prominent types of interneurons with arborizations in the antennal lobe are: (i) local interneurons ramifying in the entire lobe, (ii) unilateral relay interneurons that extend from single glomeruli into the calyx and the lateral protocerebrum (LPR), (iii) unilateral interneurons that connect several glomeruli with the LPR only, (iv) bilateral interneurons that link a small number of glomeruli in both antennal lobes with the calyx and LPR, (v) giant bilateral interneurons characterized by extensive ramifications in both antennal lobes and the posterior brain and a cell body situated in the midline of the suboesophageal ganglion, and (vi) a unilateral interneuron with extensive arborization in one antennal lobe and the posterior brain and a process that extends into the thorax. These structural results are discussed in the context of the available functional and behavioral data.


Cell and Tissue Research | 1989

Neuronal architecture of the central complex in Drosophila melanogaster

Ulrike Hanesch; Karl-Friedrich Fischbach; Martin Heisenberg

SummaryOn the basis of 1200 Golgi-impregnated brains the structure of the central complex of Drosophila melanogaster was analyzed at the cellular level. The four substructures of the central complex — the ellipsoid body, the fanshaped body, the noduli, and the protocerebral bridge — are composed of (a) columnar small-field elements linking different substructures or regions in the same substructure and (b) tangential large-field neurons forming strata perpendicular to the columns. At least some small-field neurons belong to isomorphic sets, which follow various regular projection patterns. Assuming that the blebs of a neuron are presynaptic and the spines are postsynaptic, the Golgi preparations indicate that small-field neurons projecting to the ventral bodies (accessory area) are the main output from the central complex and that its main input is through the large-field neurons. These in turn are presumed to receive input in various neuropils of the brain including the ventral bodies. Transmitters can be attributed immunocytochemically to some neuron types. For example, GABA is confined to the R1–R4 neurons of the ellipsoid body, whereas these cells are devoid of choline acetyltransferase-like immunore-activity. It is proposed that the central complex is an elaboration of the interhemispheric commissure serving the fast exchange of data between the two brain hemispheres in the control of behavioral activity.


Cell and Tissue Research | 1992

The optic lobe of Drosophila melanogaster

B. Bausenwein; A. P. M. Dittrich; Karl-Friedrich Fischbach

SummaryWe present a quantitative evaluation of Golgiimpregnated columnar neurons in the optic lobe of wildtype Drosophila melanogaster. This analysis reveals the overall connectivity pattern between the 10 neuropil layers of the medulla and demonstrates the existence of at least three major visual pathways. Pathway 1 connects medulla layer M10 to the lobula plate. Input layers of this pathway are M1 and M5. Pathway 2 connects M9 to shallow layers of the lobula, which in turn are tightly linked to the lobula plate. This pathway gets major input via M2. Pathways 1 and 2 receive input from retinula cells R1-6, either via the lamina monopolar cell L1 (terminating in M1 and M5) or via L2 and T1 (terminating in M2). Neurons of these pathways typically have small dendritic fields. We discuss evidence that pathways 1 and 2 may play a major role in motion detection. Pathway 3 connects M8 to deep layers of the lobula. In M8 information converges that is derived either from M3 (pathway 3a) or from M4 and M6 (pathway 3b), layers that get their major input from L3 and R8 or L4 and R7, respectively. Some neurons of pathway 3 have large dendritic fields. We suggest that they may be involved in the computation of form and colour. Possible analogies to the organization of pathways in the visual system of vertebrates are discussed.


Neuron | 1995

Restricted expression of the irreC-rst protein is required for normal axonal projections of columnar visual neurons

Thilo Schneider; Christian Reiter; Eckhart Eule; Brigitte Bader; Beate Lichte; Zhiping Nie; Thorsten Schimansky; Ricardo G.P. Ramos; Karl-Friedrich Fischbach

The 104 kDa irreC-rst protein, a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily, mediates homophilic adhesion in cell cultures. In larval optic chiasms, the protein is found on recently formed axon bundles, not on older ones. In developing visual neuropils, it is present in all columnar domains of specific layers. The number of irreC-rst-positive neuropil stratifications increases until the midpupal stage. Immunoreactivity fades thereafter. The functional importance of the restricted expression pattern is demonstrated by the severe projection errors of axons in the first and second optic chiasms in loss of function mutants and in transformants that express the irreC-rst protein globally. Epigenesis of the phenotypes can be explained partially on the bases of homophilic irreC-rst interactions.


Developmental Dynamics | 2007

Myoblast fusion in Drosophila melanogaster is mediated through a fusion-restricted myogenic-adhesive structure (FuRMAS)

Dörthe A. Kesper; Christiana Stute; Detlev Buttgereit; Nina Kreisköther; Smitha Vishnu; Karl-Friedrich Fischbach; Renate Renkawitz-Pohl

During myogenesis in Drosophila embryos, a prominent adhesive structure is formed between precursor cells and fusion‐competent myoblasts (fcms). Here, we show that Duf/Kirre and its interaction partners Rols7 (found in founder myoblasts and growing myotubes) and Sns (found in fcms) are organized in a ring‐structure at the contact points of fcms with precursor cells, while cytoskeletal components like F‐actin and Titin are centered in this ring in both cell types. The cytoplasmic protein Blow colocalizes with the actin plugs in fcms after cell adhesion. Furthermore, the requirement of additional as yet unidentified components was demonstrated by using mammalian C2C12 myoblasts. In this study, we propose that the fusion‐restricted myogenic‐adhesive structure (FuRMAS) is pivotal in linking cell adhesion as well as local F‐actin assembly and dynamics to downstream events that ultimately lead to plasma membrane fusion. Moreover, we suggest that the FuRMAS may restrict the area of membrane breakdown. Developmental Dynamics 236:404–415, 2007.


Journal of Neurobiology | 2001

Drosophila Pax-6/eyeless is essential for normal adult brain structure and function.

Patrick Callaerts; S Leng; Jason Clements; Corinne Benassayag; David L. Cribbs; Yuan Yuan Kang; U Walldorf; Karl-Friedrich Fischbach; R Strauss

A role for the Pax-6 homologue eyeless in adult Drosophila brain development and function is described. eyeless expression is detected in neurons, but not glial cells, of the mushroom bodies, the medullar cortex, the lateral horn, and the pars intercerebralis. Furthermore, severe defects in adult brain structures essential for vision, olfaction, and for the coordination of locomotion are provoked by two newly isolated mutations of Pax-6/eyeless that result in truncated proteins. Consistent with the morphological lesions, we observe defective walking behavior for these eyeless mutants. The implications of these data for understanding postembryonic brain development and function in Drosophila are discussed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

HOX genes in the sepiolid squid Euprymna scolopes: Implications for the evolution of complex body plans

Patrick Callaerts; Patricia N. Lee; B Hartmann; Claudia Farfán; Darrett W. Y. Choy; Kazuho Ikeo; Karl-Friedrich Fischbach; Walter J. Gehring; H. Gert de Couet

Molluscs display a rich diversity of body plans ranging from the wormlike appearance of aplacophorans to the complex body plan of the cephalopods with highly developed sensory organs, a complex central nervous system, and cognitive abilities unrivaled among the invertebrates. The aim of the current study is to define molecular parameters relevant to the developmental evolution of cephalopods by using the sepiolid squid Euprymna scolopes as a model system. Using PCR-based approaches, we identified one anterior, one paralog group 3, five central, and two posterior group Hox genes. The deduced homeodomain sequences of the E. scolopes Hox cluster genes are most similar to known annelid, brachiopod, and nemertean Hox gene homeodomain sequences. Our results are consistent with the presence of a single Hox gene cluster in cephalopods. Our data also corroborate the proposed existence of a differentiated Hox gene cluster in the last common ancestor of Bilaterians. Furthermore, our phylogenetic analysis and in particular the identification of Post-1 and Post-2 homologs support the Lophotrochozoan clade.


Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 2005

Loss- and gain-of-function analysis of the lipid raft proteins Reggie/Flotillin in Drosophila : they are posttranslationally regulated, and misexpression interferes with wing and eye development

Martin Hoehne; H. Gert de Couet; Claudia A. O. Stuermer; Karl-Friedrich Fischbach

Reggie/Flotillin proteins are upregulated after optic nerve dissection and evolutionary highly conserved components of lipid rafts. Whereas many biochemical and cell culture studies suggest an involvement in the assembly of multiprotein complexes at cell contact sites, not much is known about their biological in vivo functions. We therefore set out to study the expression pattern and the effects of loss- and gain-of-function in the Drosophila melanogaster model system. We found that in flies these proteins are mainly expressed in axons at the root of fiber tracts, in places where strong fasciculation is required, e.g. at the neck of the peduncle of the mushroom bodies and in the optic chiasms. Despite their evolutionary conservation which implies fundamental and important functions, a P-element-induced null mutant (KG00210) of reggie1/flotillin2 (reggie1/flo2) in D. melanogaster shows no apparent phenotypic defects. This was even more surprising as we show that in this reggie1/flo2 null mutant the paralogous Reggie2/Flo1 protein is unstable and degraded, while the transcript is still present. The requirement of Reggie1/Flo2 for Reggie2/Flo1 stabilization is confirmed by misexpression experiments. Reggie2/Flo1 can only be misexpressed when Reggie1/Flo2 is provided as well. Conversely, Reggie1/Flo2 immunoreactivity can be detected, when its transgene is misexpressed alone. Using appropriate Gal4 driver lines, misexpression of Reggie1/Flo2 alone or together with Reggie2/Flo1 in the eye imaginal disc results in a specific and severe mislocalization of cell adhesion molecules of the immunoglobulin superfamily (IgCAMs) (while DE-Cadherin is unaffected) and in differentiation defects pointing to impaired signaling. In the wing imaginal disc, global overexpression of Reggie/Flotillin proteins leads to a significant extension of the Wingless signal and severely disrupts normal wing development. Our data support the notion that Reggie/Flotillin proteins are implicated in signaling processes at cellular contact sites.


Cell and Tissue Research | 1997

GLIA IN THE CHIASMS AND MEDULLA OF THE DROSOPHILA MELANOGASTER OPTIC LOBES

Simone Tix; Eckhart Eule; Karl-Friedrich Fischbach; Seymour Benzer

Abstract.Different classes of glia cells in the optic lobes of Drosophila melanogaster were defined by the enhancer trap technique, using expression of the lacZ reporter gene. At both the outer and inner optic chiasms, there are stacks of glia, arrayed from dorsal to ventral, interpersed between the crossings of axonal fiber bundles. The giant glial cells of both the outer and inner chiasms are similar with respect to their nuclear shapes and positions, indicating similar functions of these cell types. Another class of glia is found in the medulla neuropil. Their cell bodies anchor in the most distal region of the neuropil, and their processes extend into the deeper neuropil layers. Birth dating using BrdU shows that both groups of chiasm glia are born early in larval life; they may participate in the development of the optic lobe. The medulla glia are born later and may be involved primarily in adult functions. In the wild type, and in mutants with structurally altered optic lobes, the numbers of tract-associated glial cells in the outer and inner optic chiasms seem to vary with the number of visual columns, whereas the complement of medulla neuropil glia correlates with the volume of the optic lobe.


Journal of Comparative Physiology A-neuroethology Sensory Neural and Behavioral Physiology | 1977

T-maze phototaxis ofDrosophila melanogaster and several mutants in the visual systems

K. G. Jacob; R. Willmund; Elisabeth Folkers; Karl-Friedrich Fischbach; H.-Ch. Spatz

SummaryT-maze phototaxis ofDrosophila melanogaster and several of its mutants was investigated as function of the light illuminating the mazes. For visible light the response curves of thewildtype are quite complex and nonmonotonic functions of the light intensity. The data are interpreted as a result of an interaction between visual subsystems: the system which receives inputs from receptor cells R1-R6 is inhibited by the system of receptor cells R7 and R8, probably by R8 alone.

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Ricardo G.P. Ramos

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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H. Gert de Couet

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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