Holly Cline, PhD Principal Investigator
Jennifer Bestman, PhD Postdoctoral Fellow
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Funded in July 2004 ($40,000)
Funded in July 2003 ($35,000)
Dr. Jennifer Bestman started her first Fragile X study with FRAXA funding in 2003.
This research group is examining the normal role of
FMRP using tadpoles as a model (when multiple model
systems yield similar results, the perceived weight of the
evidence produced is much greater). So far, they have
shown that FMRP and associated proteins and translation
factors are involved in the development of neurons in
tadpoles. They now plan to explore the effects of
pharmacologic interventions in this model system.
Dr. Bestman is expressing fluorescently-tagged fragile X protein, along with other proteins involved
in mRNA regulation, in neurons in the optic tectum of the tadpoles. Since the tadpoles are
transparent, she can use time-lapse 2-photon microscopy to capture changes in the structure of
individual developing neurons in the living animal, over a period of minutes to days.
Because the optic tectum is the area of the brain where visual information is first received
and processed, she is testing how visually-induced synaptic activity to neurons and
Fragile X protein-dependent protein synthesis interact to control the morphological development
of these neurons.