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Dive into the research topics where Marc R. Freeman is active.

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Featured researches published by Marc R. Freeman.


Neuron | 1999

A Novel Family of Divergent Seven-Transmembrane Proteins: Candidate Odorant Receptors in Drosophila

Peter J. Clyne; Coral G. Warr; Marc R. Freeman; Derek Lessing; Junhyong Kim; John R. Carlson

Although insects have proven to be valuable models for exploring the function, organization, and development of the olfactory system, the receptor molecules that bind odors have not been identified in any insect. We have developed a novel search algorithm, used it to search the Drosophila genomic sequence database, and identified a large multigene family encoding seven transmembrane domain proteins that are expressed in olfactory organs. We show that expression is restricted to subsets of olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) for a number of these genes. Different members of the family initiate expression at different times during antennal development. Some of the genes are not expressed in a mutant of the Acj6 POU-domain transcription factor, a mutant in which a subset of ORNs show abnormal odorant specificities.


Neuron | 2006

The Drosophila Cell Corpse Engulfment Receptor Draper Mediates Glial Clearance of Severed Axons

Jennifer M. MacDonald; Margaret G. Beach; Ermelinda Porpiglia; Amy E. Sheehan; Ryan J. Watts; Marc R. Freeman

Neuron-glia communication is central to all nervous system responses to trauma, yet neural injury signaling pathways remain poorly understood. Here we explore cellular and molecular aspects of neural injury signaling in Drosophila. We show that transected Drosophila axons undergo injury-induced degeneration that is morphologically similar to Wallerian degeneration in mammals and can be suppressed by the neuroprotective mouse Wlds protein. Axonal injury elicits potent morphological and molecular responses from Drosophila glia: glia upregulate expression of the engulfment receptor Draper, undergo dramatic changes in morphology, and rapidly recruit cellular processes toward severed axons. In draper mutants, glia fail to respond morphologically to axon injury, and severed axons are not cleared from the CNS. Thus Draper appears to act as a glial receptor for severed axon-derived molecular cues that drive recruitment of glial processes to injured axons for engulfment.


Annual Review of Neuroscience | 2010

Wallerian Degeneration, WldS, and Nmnat

Michael P. Coleman; Marc R. Freeman

Traditionally, researchers have believed that axons are highly dependent on their cell bodies for long-term survival. However, recent studies point to the existence of axon-autonomous mechanism(s) that regulate rapid axon degeneration after axotomy. Here, we review the cellular and molecular events that underlie this process, termed Wallerian degeneration. We describe the biphasic nature of axon degeneration after axotomy and our current understanding of how Wld(S)--an extraordinary protein formed by fusing a Ube4b sequence to Nmnat1--acts to protect severed axons. Interestingly, the neuroprotective effects of Wld(S) span all species tested, which suggests that there is an ancient, Wld(S)-sensitive axon destruction program. Recent studies with Wld(S) also reveal that Wallerian degeneration is genetically related to several dying back axonopathies, thus arguing that Wallerian degeneration can serve as a useful model to understand, and potentially treat, axon degeneration in diverse traumatic or disease contexts.


Neuron | 2003

Unwrapping Glial Biology: Gcm Target Genes Regulating Glial Development, Diversification, and Function

Marc R. Freeman; Jeffrey J. Delrow; Junhyong Kim; Eric A. Johnson; Chris Q. Doe

Glia are the most abundant cell type in the mammalian brain. They regulate neuronal development and function, CNS immune surveillance, and stem cell biology, yet we know surprisingly little about glia in any organism. Here we identify over 40 new Drosophila glial genes. We use glial cells missing (gcm) mutants and misexpression to verify they are Gcm regulated in vivo. Many genes show unique spatiotemporal responsiveness to Gcm in the CNS, and thus glial subtype diversification requires spatially or temporally restricted Gcm cofactors. These genes provide insights into glial biology: we show unc-5 (a repulsive netrin receptor) orients glial migrations and the draper gene mediates glial engulfment of apoptotic neurons and larval locomotion. Many identified Drosophila glial genes have homologs expressed in mammalian glia, revealing conserved molecular features of glial cells. 80% of these Drosophila glial genes have mammalian homologs; these are now excellent candidates for regulating human glial development, function, or disease.


Science | 2012

dSarm/Sarm1 Is Required for Activation of an Injury-Induced Axon Death Pathway

Jeannette M. Osterloh; Jing Yang; Timothy M. Rooney; A. Nicole Fox; Robert Adalbert; Eric Powell; Amy E. Sheehan; Michelle A. Avery; Rachel Hackett; Mary A. Logan; Jennifer M. MacDonald; Jennifer S. Ziegenfuss; Stefan Milde; Ying Ju Hou; Carl Nathan; Aihao Ding; Robert H. Brown; Laura Conforti; Michael P. Coleman; Marc Tessier-Lavigne; Stephan Züchner; Marc R. Freeman

Sarm-Assisted Suicide Neurodegenerative disease or nerve lesions cause axons and synapses to disintegrate through a process known as Wallerian degeneration, which may involve an active “axon death program.” Osterloh et al. (p. 481, published online 7 June; see the Perspective by Yu and Luo) identify loss-of-function mutations in Drosophila dSarm that are capable of blocking the degeneration of severed axons for the fly life span. Deletion of mouse Sarm1 provides similar protection to severed axons for weeks after injury, which suggests that Sarm is part of an ancient axonal death signaling cascade. Mutations in a scaffold protein block the Wallerian degeneration of axons in flies and mice. Axonal and synaptic degeneration is a hallmark of peripheral neuropathy, brain injury, and neurodegenerative disease. Axonal degeneration has been proposed to be mediated by an active autodestruction program, akin to apoptotic cell death; however, loss-of-function mutations capable of potently blocking axon self-destruction have not been described. Here, we show that loss of the Drosophila Toll receptor adaptor dSarm (sterile α/Armadillo/Toll-Interleukin receptor homology domain protein) cell-autonomously suppresses Wallerian degeneration for weeks after axotomy. Severed mouse Sarm1 null axons exhibit remarkable long-term survival both in vivo and in vitro, indicating that Sarm1 prodegenerative signaling is conserved in mammals. Our results provide direct evidence that axons actively promote their own destruction after injury and identify dSarm/Sarm1 as a member of an ancient axon death signaling pathway.


Science | 2010

Specification and Morphogenesis of Astrocytes

Marc R. Freeman

Astrocytes are the most abundant cell type in the mammalian brain. Interest in astrocyte function has increased dramatically in recent years because of their newly discovered roles in synapse formation, maturation, efficacy, and plasticity. However, our understanding of astrocyte development has lagged behind that of other brain cell types. We do not know the molecular mechanism by which astrocytes are specified, how they grow to assume their complex morphologies, and how they interact with and sculpt developing neuronal circuits. Recent work has provided a basic understanding of how intrinsic and extrinsic mechanisms govern the production of astrocytes from precursor cells and the generation of astrocyte diversity. Moreover, new studies of astrocyte morphology have revealed that mature astrocytes are extraordinarily complex, interact with many thousands of synapses, and tile with other astrocytes to occupy unique spatial domains in the brain. A major challenge for the field is to understand how astrocytes talk to each other, and to neurons, during development to establish appropriate astrocytic and neuronal network architectures.


Trends in Neurosciences | 2006

Glial cell biology in Drosophila and vertebrates

Marc R. Freeman; Johnna E. Doherty

Glia are the most abundant cell type in the mammalian nervous system and they have vital roles in neural development, function and health. However our understanding of the biology of glia is in its infancy. How do glia develop and interact with neurons? How diverse are glial populations? What are the primary functions of glia in the mature nervous system? These questions can be addressed incisively in the Drosophila nervous system--this contains relatively few glia, which are well-defined histologically and amenable to powerful molecular-genetic analyses. Here, we highlight several developmental, morphological and functional similarities between Drosophila and vertebrate glia. The striking parallels that emerge from this comparison argue that invertebrate model organisms such as Drosophila have excellent potential to add to our understanding of fundamental aspects of glial biology.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

Ensheathing Glia Function as Phagocytes in the Adult Drosophila Brain

Johnna E. Doherty; Mary A. Logan; Ozge E. Tasdemir; Marc R. Freeman

The mammalian brain contains many subtypes of glia that vary in their morphologies, gene expression profiles, and functional roles; however, the functional diversity of glia in the adult Drosophila brain remains poorly defined. Here we define the diversity of glial subtypes that exist in the adult Drosophila brain, show they bear striking similarity to mammalian brain glia, and identify the major phagocytic cell type responsible for engulfing degenerating axons after acute axotomy. We find that neuropil regions contain two different populations of glia: ensheathing glia and astrocytes. Ensheathing glia enwrap major structures in the adult brain, but are not closely associated with synapses. Interestingly, we find these glia uniquely express key components of the glial phagocytic machinery (e.g., the engulfment receptor Draper, and dCed-6), respond morphologically to axon injury, and autonomously require components of the Draper signaling pathway for successful clearance of degenerating axons from the injured brain. Astrocytic glia, in contrast, do not express Draper or dCed-6, fail to respond morphologically to axon injury, and appear to play no role in clearance of degenerating axons from the brain. However, astrocytic glia are closely associated with synaptic regions in neuropil, and express excitatory amino acid transporters, which are presumably required for the clearance of excess neurotransmitters at the synaptic cleft. Together these results argue that ensheathing glia and astrocytes are preprogrammed cell types in the adult Drosophila brain, with ensheathing glia acting as phagocytes after axotomy, and astrocytes potentially modulating synapse formation and signaling.


Nature | 2008

Draper-dependent glial phagocytic activity is mediated by Src and Syk family kinase signalling.

Jennifer S. Ziegenfuss; Romi Biswas; Michelle A. Avery; Kyoungja Hong; Amy E. Sheehan; Yee Guide Yeung; E. Richard Stanley; Marc R. Freeman

The cellular machinery promoting phagocytosis of corpses of apoptotic cells is well conserved from worms to mammals. An important component is the Caenorhabditis elegans engulfment receptor CED-1 (ref. 1) and its Drosophila orthologue, Draper. The CED-1/Draper signalling pathway is also essential for the phagocytosis of other types of ‘modified self’ including necrotic cells, developmentally pruned axons and dendrites, and axons undergoing Wallerian degeneration. Here we show that Drosophila Shark, a non-receptor tyrosine kinase similar to mammalian Syk and Zap-70, binds Draper through an immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif (ITAM) in the Draper intracellular domain. We show that Shark activity is essential for Draper-mediated signalling events in vivo, including the recruitment of glial membranes to severed axons and the phagocytosis of axonal debris and neuronal cell corpses by glia. We also show that the Src family kinase (SFK) Src42A can markedly increase Draper phosphorylation and is essential for glial phagocytic activity. We propose that ligand-dependent Draper receptor activation initiates the Src42A-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation of Draper, the association of Shark and the activation of the Draper pathway. These Draper–Src42A–Shark interactions are strikingly similar to mammalian immunoreceptor–SFK–Syk signalling events in mammalian myeloid and lymphoid cells. Thus, Draper seems to be an ancient immunoreceptor with an extracellular domain tuned to modified self, and an intracellular domain promoting phagocytosis through an ITAM-domain–SFK–Syk-mediated signalling cascade.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2009

Wld S requires Nmnat1 enzymatic activity and N16-VCP interactions to suppress Wallerian degeneration.

Michelle A. Avery; Amy E. Sheehan; Kimberly S. Kerr; Jing Wang; Marc R. Freeman

Slow Wallerian degeneration (WldS) encodes a chimeric Ube4b/nicotinamide mononucleotide adenylyl transferase 1 (Nmnat1) fusion protein that potently suppresses Wallerian degeneration, but the mechanistic action of WldS remains controversial. In this study, we characterize WldS-mediated axon protection in vivo using Drosophila melanogaster. We show that Nmnat1 can protect severed axons from autodestruction but at levels significantly lower than WldS, and enzyme-dead versions of Nmnat1 and WldS exhibit severely reduced axon-protective function. Interestingly, a 16–amino acid N-terminal domain of WldS (termed N16) accounts for the differences in axon-sparing activity between WldS and Nmnat1, and N16-dependent enhancement of Nmnat1-protective activity in WldS requires the N16-binding protein valosin-containing protein (VCP)/TER94. Thus, WldS-mediated suppression of Wallerian degeneration results from VCP–N16 interactions and Nmnat1 activity converging in vivo. Surprisingly, mouse Nmnat3, a mitochondrial Nmnat enzyme that localizes to the cytoplasm in Drosophila cells, protects severed axons at levels indistinguishable from WldS. Thus, nuclear Nmnat activity does not appear to be essential for WldS-like axon protection.

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Amy E. Sheehan

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Johnna E. Doherty

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Lukas J. Neukomm

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Thomas C. Burdett

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Jeannette M. Osterloh

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Michelle A. Avery

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Timothy M. Rooney

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Jaeda C. Coutinho-Budd

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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