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Research Papers

Roles for Drp1, a Dynamin-related Protein, and Milton, a Kinesin-associated Protein, in Mitochondrial Segregation, Unfurling, and Elongation During Drosophila Spermatogenesis

Amanda C. Aldridge, Levi Benson, Monica M. Siegenthaler, Benjamin T. Whigham, R. Steven Stowers and Karen G. Hales
Volume 1, Issue 1
January/February 2007

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Mitochondria undergo dramatic rearrangement during Drosophila spermatogenesis. In wild type testes, the many small mitochondria present in pre-meiotic spermatocytes later aggregate, fuse, and interwrap in post-meiotic haploid spermatids to form the spherical Nebenkern, whose two giant mitochondrial compartments later unfurl and elongate beside the growing flagellar axoneme. Drp1 encodes a dynamin-related protein whose homologs in many organisms mediate mitochondrial fission and whose Drosophila homolog is known to govern mitochondrial morphology in neurons. The milton gene encodes an adaptor protein that links mitochondria with kinesin and that is required for mitochondrial transport in Drosophila neurons. To determine the roles of Drp1 and Milton in spermatogenesis, we used the FLP-FRT mitotic recombination system to generate spermatocytes homozygous for mutations in either gene in an otherwise heterozygous background. We found that absence of Drp1 leads to abnormal clustering of mitochondria in mature primary spermatocytes and aberrant unfurling of the mitochondrial derivatives in early Drp1 spermatids undergoing axonemal elongation. In milton spermatocytes, mitochondria are distributed normally; however, after meiosis, the Nebenkern is not strongly anchored to the nucleus, and the mitochondrial derivatives do not elongate properly. Our work defines specific functions for Drp1 and Milton in the anchoring, unfurling, and elongation of mitochondria during sperm formation.


Authors

Amanda C. Aldridge
Department of Biology, Davidson College, Davidson, NC
Levi Benson
Monica M. Siegenthaler
Department of Biology, Davidson College, Davidson, NC
Benjamin T. Whigham
Department of Biology, Davidson College, Davidson, NC
R. Steven Stowers
Department of Molecular & Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA
Karen G. Hales
Department of Biology, Davidson College, Davidson, NC

We now provide open access to journal articles published online for one year or more. This article may be downloaded at the following link:

 Download PDF

If the document does not open, please right-click on the link (control-click on a Macintosh) and select the option to save the file to disk.

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