(
A) Occurrence rates of dendritic Ca
2+ transients in whole-mount preparations of the wild type,
dTrpA1, and
painless mutants, which were evoked by IR-laser irradiations (38 mW, 1 s) onto somata. We performed one trial per cell, and the number of cells of each genotype examined are indicated above each bar. (
B) Peak amplitudes in somata of individual trials are plotted. Note that Ca
2+ rises in somata were slow in contrast to the sharp dendritic Ca
2+ transients when somata were irradiated (cf.
Figure 2A; 'soma'). The magenta dots in
B indicate occurrences of dendritic Ca
2+ transients; the gray dots represent those with no apparent Ca
2+ transient. The peak amplitudes of these slow Ca
2+ rises were significantly decreased in
dTrpA1 null mutants. This result was suggestive of a contribution of a dTrpA1-mediated physiological process, although an exact mechanism underlying such slow fluctuations remains unclear. (
C–
E) Occurrences of dendritic Ca
2+ transients in the presence of TTX or Thapsigargin treatment, which depletes the cytoplasmic Ca
2+ store. We focused the IR-laser (38 mW, 1 s) onto the somata of Class IV neurons in the fillet-mounted larvae, which were pretreated with TTX and Thapsigargin (
C and
D, respectively). Blue traces indicate the amplitudes of Ca
2+ transients of controls, whereas magenta traces indicate those with the drugs. The semitransparent traces represent amplitudes of Ca
2+ transients of individual cells, and the solid traces show the average values of each group. Error bars indicate the standard deviations of the peak amplitudes of Ca
2+ transients. The TTX-treatment had no effect on the occurrence and amplitude of Ca
2+ transients (
C), whereas the Thapsigargin-treatment only decreased the amplitude of Ca
2+ transients (
D). The effects of TTX was confirmed by loss of spikes. The application of TTX is indicated by a green bar above the trace (
E). Fisher’s exact test (
A), ANOVA and Dunnet
post-hoc analysis (
B), and Student’s unpaired
t-test (
C and
D) were performed and statistical significances were assigned, *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001. Genotype:
3×[ppk-TNXXL] (attP40)/+. To further address the contribution of Ca
2+-induced Ca
2+-release (CICR) from the cytoplasmic Ca
2+ store to the formation of Ca
2+ transients, we examined mutants for the inositol triphosphate receptor gene (
Itp-r83A05616/90B.0) (
Venkatesh and Hasan, 1997) or the Ryanodine receptor gene (
RyRK04913/16) (
Casas-Tinto et al., 2011;
Gao et al., 2013). Both mutants showed Ca
2+ transients with occurrence and amplitude that were not significantly different from those in the wild type (data not shown), showing that the role of CICR was negligible.