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Publication : A mouse homolog of dunce, a gene important for learning and memory in Drosophila, is preferentially expressed in olfactory receptor neurons.

First Author  Cherry JA Year  1995
Journal  J Neurobiol Volume  28
Issue  1 Pages  102-13
PubMed ID  8586960 Mgi Jnum  J:28665
Mgi Id  MGI:76186 Doi  10.1002/neu.480280109
Citation  Cherry JA, et al. (1995) A mouse homolog of dunce, a gene important for learning and memory in Drosophila, is preferentially expressed in olfactory receptor neurons. J Neurobiol 28(1):102-13
abstractText  The dunce (dnc) gene in Drosophila codes for a cyclic adenosine monophosphate-specific phosphodiesterase (PDE). Flies with a mutation at this locus exhibit severe deficits in learning and memory. We have begun to analyze the neural distribution of mammalian homologs of dnc in the mouse. Surprisingly, in situ hybridization and northern blotting using a probe specific for one of the four mammalian dnc homologs (mPDE2) reveals high levels of expression in the olfactory neuroepithelium. Anti-mPDE2 antibody confirms that this PDE protein is abundant in the axons and dendrites of the olfactory receptor neurons but is conspicuously absent from the cilia, where the initial events in olfactory signal transduction occur. Lower levels of mPDE2 were also detected throughout the brain and in the testis. These findings suggest an important modulatory role for mPDE2 in mammalian olfaction.
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