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1.
The effects of homeotic mutations on transdetermination in eye-antenna imaginal discs of Drosophila melanogaster were studied. After 12 days of culture in vivo, antenna discs transformed to ventral mesothorax by AntpNs or AntpZ, transdetermined to notum and wing structures four to five times more frequently than the corresponding wild-type antenna discs. Likewise, eye discs transformed to dorsal mesothorax by eyopt transdetermined to leg structures, also extremely frequently (90%). It seems that, during culture, homeotic antenna as well as homeotic eye discs tend to complete the structural inventory of the mesothoracic segment. Transdetermination in the homeotic disc parts is interpreted as a regeneration process which reestablishes an entire segment, i.e., the ventral mesothoracic portion (leg) in the antenna disc regenerates dorsal mesothoracic parts, and the dorsal mesothoracic portion in the eye disc (wing) regenerates ventral mesothoracic parts, respectively. This implies that antenna and leg discs (ventral qualities) as well as eye and wing discs (dorsal qualities) are serially homologous. The transdetermination frequency of the untransformed eye disc to notum and wing structures is enhanced by Antp to the same extent as is the transdetermination frequency of the antenna disc. The first allotypic wing disc structure formed by the eye disc is notum, followed by structures of the anterior wing compartment and finally by posterior wing structures. No evidence for such a sequence was found in the transdetermination pattern of the antenna disc.  相似文献   

2.
Sustar A  Schubiger G 《Cell》2005,120(3):383-393
When Drosophila imaginal discs regenerate, specific groups of cells can switch disc identity so that, for example, cells determined for leg identity switch to wing. Such switches in cell determination are known as transdetermination. We have developed a system by which individual cells are marked and monitored in vivo as they transdetermine so that their proliferation, cell sizes, and differentiation are accurately traced. Here, we document that when cells transdetermine, they do not convert to a younger cell cycle. Instead, cell cycle changes precede transdetermination and are different from those observed at any time in normal development. We propose that it is not a younger but a unique cell cycle progression and a big cell size that conditions the cells for developmental plasticity.  相似文献   

3.
Drosophila imaginal discs, the primordia of the adult fly appendages, are an excellent system for studying developmental plasticity. Cells in the imaginal discs are determined for their disc-specific fate (wingness, legness) during embryogenesis. Disc cells maintain their determination during larval development, a time of extensive growth and proliferation. Only when prompted to regenerate do disc cells exhibit lability in their determined identity. Regeneration in the disc is mediated by a localized region of cell division, known as the regeneration blastema. Most regenerating disc cells strictly adhere to their disc-specific identity; some cells however, switch fate in a phenomenon known as transdetermination. Similar regeneration and transdetermination events can be induced in situ by misexpression of the signaling molecule wingless. Recent studies indicate that the plasticity of disc cells during regeneration is associated with high morphogen activity and the reorganization of chromatin structure. Here we provide both a historical perspective of imaginal disc transdetermination, as well as discuss recent findings on how imaginal disc cells acquire developmental plasticity and multipotency. We also highlight how an understanding of imaginal disc transdetermination can enhance an understanding of developmental potency exhibited by stem cells.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The wild-type allele of the gene defective dorsal discs (ddd) is required for the normal development of the dorsal thoracic discs in Drosophila melanogaster. In ddd mutant larvae the dorsal discs (wing, haltere, and humeral) are greatly reduced in size or absent while the ventral discs (leg) are unaffected. We have examined the function of the ddd+ gene in wing development. The ddd+ product is not involved in the initial determination of wing cells but rather is required for their subsequent proliferation during the larval period. Analysis of chimaeras shows that there is a requirement for ddd+ gene expression in wing discs, but it is sufficient for normal development that only some cells in a disc express the gene. We propose that the ddd+ product is involved in the synthesis of a factor which is required for the normal growth of wing discs and which can be transferred between wing disc cells.  相似文献   

6.
The vestigial (vg) mutant of Drosophila melanogaster shows reduced wing size and lacks margin structures from the wing blade. The expressivity is temperature-sensitive, more structures being formed at 29°C than at 25°C. There is cell death in the third instar wing disc which to some extent parallels the fate map locations of the structures absent in the adult.
Vestigial wing discs are unable to regenerate margin structures even when given extra time for growth by culturing them in an adult abdomen before metamorphosis. If the region of cell death is excised from the disc before culture, there is still no regeneration of margin structures, indicating that the dead cells do not physically prevent regulation. Furthermore, by metamorphosing young vg wing discs, it was discovered that cells never acquire competence to make margin during wing disc development. Experiments mixing fragments of vg wing disc with non- vg wing disc fragments of ebony multiple wing hairs (e mwh) genotype showed that the vg cells interacted with the e mwh cells and wing blade was intercalated of both genotypes. However, structures such as wing margin, and alar lobe, usually affected in vg wings, were always made from e mwh cells and not from vg cells. Analysis of mutants which are unable to differentiate particular cell types may help us to understand the mechanism of pattern establishment in developing imaginal discs.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The transdetermination capacities of leg discs ofDrosophila melanogaster were examined by mechanically disrupting and kneading whole discs from late third instar larvae and by culturing the resulting tissue mass for 10–14 days in adult female abdomens where the cells continued to divide. The grown implants were then dissected from the abdomens and injected into third instar larvae to undergo metamorphosis.After this treatment, prothoracic leg discs ofDrosophila melanogaster transdetermined with a high frequency (59% of all implants) to wing. Mesothoracic leg discs also transdetermined to wing, but at a very low frequency (4%). Metathoracic leg discs exhibited the same low frequency of transdetermination (4%), but in this case the direction of transdetermination was to haltere (Table 1,D. melanogaster).Very similar results were obtained with leg discs ofDrosophila nigromelanica (Table 1,D. nigromelanica), showing that the peculiar behavior of the three leg discs is not unique forDrosophila melanogaster.The homeotic mutation Polycomb (Pc 3) which partially transforms meso- and metathoracic legs into prothoracic legs did not significantly increase the frequencies of transdetermination in these leg dises and had clearly no effect on the direction of transdetermination (Table 1).We dedicate this publication to the memory of our teacher and advisor, the late Professor Ernst Hadorn, whose enthusiasm and interest stimulated our work  相似文献   

8.
Lethal (1) discs-large-1 [l(1)dlg-1] is a non-epithelial overgrowth or neoplastic mutant of Drosophila, which results in tumor-like imaginal discs and enlarged larvae that never pupariate. In an ultrastructural analysis we found that the wing discs develop convoluted monolayers of epithelial cells characterized by well-defined apical-basal polarity and that these layered cells secrete large amounts of basement membrane material. Immuno-EM indicates that Drosophila laminin and collagen are components of this matrix. Late in development clusters or 'rosettes' of separated cells lacking cell-cell junctions and apical-basal polarity form. In in vitro culture experiments l(1)dlg-1 wing discs did not respond to a pulse of exogenous ecdysone by secreting cuticle or losing basement membrane as normal discs do. Our observations are consistent with the hypothesis that cell-cell interaction and communication is required for termination of disc cell proliferation, which must occur prior to a cellular response to ecdysone.  相似文献   

9.
Chemical Patterns, Compartments and a Binary Epigenetic Code in Drosophila   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
I propose a model which accounts for the geometries and sequencein which compartmental boundary lines arise on the differentimaginal discs, and on the blastoderm of Drosophila melanogaster;and propose that successive lines are recorded by differentbinary switches, to create a binary epigenetic code word specifyingeach disc, and disc compartment. I suppose a biochemical systemundergoing reaction and diffusion acts throughout development.As an imaginal disc grows, a succession of differently shapedchemical concentration patterns form at a discrete set of discsizes. I suppose a specific concentration of one chemical isa threshold. Concentrations above or below threshold switchcells to one or another of two commitments. Then the line acrossthe imaginal disc with the threshold concentration is a predictedcompartmental boundary. The sequence and geometries of suchlines predict the compartmental boundaries seen on the wingdisc, the other discs, and on the blastoderm stage egg. Thecompartmental lines on the wing disc suggest that a terminalcompartment is specified by a combination of binary names recordinga sequence of binary commitments: anterior, not posterior; dorsal,not ventral; wing, not thorax; proximal, not distal. Each combinationcomprises a binary epigenetic code word. Recently I constructedan independent model for transdetermination in Drosophila whichproposed a similar binary epigenetic code for the differentdiscs. The clone restriction lines predicted on the blastodermby my transdetermination model, the chemical pattern model,and analogy with the wing disc, are nearly identical. Severalare already confirmed. The resultant binary code scheme correctlypredicts many relative transdetermination frequencies and accountssimply for the action of most homeotic mutants as genes whichalter a single switch state in one or more discs.  相似文献   

10.
Drosophila imaginal disc cells have the ability to undergo transdetermination, a process whereby determined disc cells change fate to that of another disc identity. For example, leg disc cells can transdetermine to develop as wing cells. Such events can occur after mechanical disc fragmentation and subsequent regeneration. A subset of transdetermination events can be induced in situ by misexpression of the signaling gene wingless. Both fragmentation and wingless induce transdetermination by altering the expression of selector genes, which drive disc-specific developmental programs. An important future goal is to address how signaling pathways interact with chromatin structure to regulate and maintain the proper expression of selector genes.  相似文献   

11.
Summary A number of mutants of Drosophila melanogaster are characterized by the absence of structures present in the wild type. Imaginal discs from the wing mutants vestigial, apterous-Xasta, Beadex and cut and from the eye mutants Bar, eyeless and lozenge were examined by light and electron microscopy. In all these mutants, with the exception of lozenge, clear evidence of degeneration was found. The onset and duration of degeneration and the number and distribution of dying cells were specific characteristics of each mutant. In most cases the degenerate areas of the disc could be correlated with the missing parts of the adult wing or eye. In contrast, in wild type wing and eye discs and in wing discs from the mutant miniature, which has a wing reduced in size but fully formed, extensive cell death was not observed.The ultrastructural features of the degenerating areas weresimilar in all the mutants studied. Conspicuous aspects of the cytolytic process included condensation and fragmentation of the dying cells followed by phagocytosis of the cell fragments by neighboring disc cells.The results indicate that localized cell death during development is a widespread occurrence among Drosophila mutants which exhibit structural deficiències.  相似文献   

12.
It is largely unknown how growth slows and then stops in vivo. Similar to most organs, Drosophila imaginal discs undergo a fast, near-exponential growth phase followed by a slow growth phase before final target size is reached. We have used a genetic approach to study the role of an ABC-E protein, Pixie, in wing disc growth. pixie mutants, like mutants in ribosomal proteins genes (known as Minutes), show severe developmental delay with relatively mild alterations in final body size. Intriguingly, pixie mutant wing imaginal discs show complex regional and temporal defects in growth and cell survival that are compensated to result in near-normal final size. In S2 cells, Pixie, like its yeast homolog RLI1, is required for translation. However, a comparison of the growth of eukaryotic translation initiation factor eIF4A and pixie mutant clones in wing discs suggests that only a subset of translation regulators, including pixie, mediate regional differences in growth and cell survival in wing discs. Interestingly, some of the regional effects on pixie mutant clone growth are enhanced in a Minute background. Our results suggest that the role of Pixie is not merely to allow growth, as might be expected for a translation regulator. Instead, Pixie also behaves as a target of putative constraining signals that slow disc growth during late larval life. We propose a model in which a balance of growth inhibitors and promoters determines tissue growth rates and cell survival. An alteration in this balance slows growth before final disc size is reached.  相似文献   

13.
Transections and grafting experiments performed in Lineus ruber rostral ends allowed us to generate ribbonworms with a duplication of the postocellar region combined with a deletion of the ocellar region. In such homeotically reconstructed animals, the syngeneic postocellar region transdifferentiated into an ocellar region with functional eyes while the allogeneic postocellar region underwent no transformation. In this case, transdifferentiation is a morphogenetic process leading to the restoration of the normal antero-posterior (A-P) axis pattern in adult worms. This regulative conversion of one adult body region into another, which so far has not been described in any bilaterian animal, is comparable with transdetermination of larval imaginal discs in Drosophila. Under certain conditions, Drosophila, wing imaginal disc cells express the eyeless master control gene and give rise to eyes. Here, we show in Lineus that the transposition of postocellar tissue into the ocellar location causes expression of the eyeless ortholog LsPax-6 and results in eye development. Our results in Lineus clearly suggest that transdifferentiation of adult body regions moved to a different position along the A-P axis is similar to transdetermination of the larval imaginal disc cells which are determined, but not yet differentiated.  相似文献   

14.
The ectopic expression of the master ey gene by the GAL4-UAS system can induce ectopic eye formation in different organs. The formation of ectopic eyes takes place in certain regions of imaginal discs, which partially overlap with the regions responsible for the transdetermination of differentiated cells (essentially meaning the alteration of the cell fate). In this way, ectopic eye induction could be considered as a model for cellular plasticity studies. In the present work, we performed a search for transgenes, the ectopic coexpression of which with the master ey gene induced morphologic changes in the ectopic eyes on the wing compared to the sole ey expression. Most of the transgenes found to affect the size of ectopic eyes belonged to the class of vesicular trafficking genes capable of affecting different signaling pathways. The ectopic expression of the revealed transgenes in the wing and eye discs altered the morphology of both normal wings and normal eyes. We argue that the effect of these genes may be that they change the size of the region responsible for cell fate transdetermination.  相似文献   

15.
We have tested the ability of fragments of one type of imaginal disc to stimulate regeneration of another type. It has been shown by others that, when extreme proximal and distal fragments of the wing disc are combined, intercalary regeneration of the missing tissue ensues. Each fragment, if cultured alone, will merely duplicate its structures. We now find that distal fragments of other thoracic discs, haltere and leg, while retaining their autonomy for differentiation, also interact with proximal wing tissue to promote regeneration of more distal wing structures. The proximal wing tissue used in these experiments was the wingless abnormal wing disc which, in the absence of interaction, yields only proximal wing structures. These results suggest that spatial organization is controlled by similar systems in the various thoracic discs. In contrast, head and genital disc material provided no regenerative stimulus to the mutant wing disc tissue.  相似文献   

16.
We have generated a monoclonal antibody that recognizes a major component of a specialized extracellular matrix in Drosophila imaginal discs. In mature larvae, antibody binding is observed almost exclusively on imaginal discs. On the basal surface of the thoracic discs, the antigen is localized to particular regions of the epithelium, and ultrastructural studies indicate that the antigen is found in a fibrous network secreted between the cells and the basal lamina. The localized expression indicates that the matrix is not simply related to disc differentiation, as all regions of the columnar disc epithelium are determined to secrete adult cuticle. A correlation of the antigen distribution with known developmental events leads us to propose that the antigen-containing network provides an extensible matrix for the rapid elongation of the disc epithelium during evagination; consistent with this, the antigen is a component of the matrix between the dorsal and ventral surfaces of the evaginated wing pouch. The antigen is very large (greater than 5 X 10(5) Da), can be labeled metabolically with methionine and sulfate, and is digested by chondroitinase ABC; these biochemical characteristics indicate that the antigen is a proteoglycan.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Distribution of the enzyme aldehyde oxidase in transformed haltere discs from the homoeotic bithorax series of mutants was investigated by histochemical means. The bithorax (bx) mutant, which transforms the anterior part of the haltere into an alterior with blade, possesses in the haltere disc an aldehyde oxidase staining pattern similar to that of the anterior side of the wing disc. The postbithorax (pbx) mutant, which transforms the posterior haltere into a structure resembling the posterior wing blade, reveals an aldehyde oxidase staining pattern in the haltere disc characteristic of the posterior side of the wing disc pouch. When both (bx 3 (pbx) mutants are present the haltere develops into a metathoracic wing. It is shown here that the transformed haltere disc closely resembles the previously established pattern in the wing disc with respect to aldehyde oxidase distribution. Change in the pattern of aldehyde oxidase in bithorax mutants signals alteration in gene expression which at least for this particular enzyme correlates well with the morphological transformation from haltere to wing. A possible correlation between pattern of enzyme activity and developmental compartmentalization has been discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The mechanisms that control organ growth are among the least known in development. This is particularly the case for the process in which growth is arrested once final size is reached. We have studied this problem in the wing disc of Drosophila, the developmental and growth parameters of which are well known. We have devised a method to generate entire fast-growing Minute(+) (M(+)) discs or compartments in slow developing Minute/+ (M/+) larvae. Under these conditions, a M(+) wing disc gains at least 20 hours of additional development time. Yet it grows to the same size of Minute/+ discs developing in M/+ larvae. We have also generated wing discs in which all the cells in either the anterior (A) or the posterior (P) compartment are transformed from M/+ to M(+). We find that the difference in the cell division rate of their cells is reflected in autonomous differences in the developmental progression of these compartments: each grows at its own rate and manifests autonomous regulation in the expression of the developmental genes wingless and vestigial. In spite of these differences, ;mosaic' discs comprising fast and slow compartments differentiate into adult wings of the correct size and shape. Our results demonstrate that imaginal discs possess an autonomous mechanism with which to arrest growth in anterior and posterior compartments, which behave as independent developmental units. We propose that this mechanism does not act by preventing cell divisions, but by lengthening the division cycle.  相似文献   

19.
Summary We estimate the number of blastoderm cells which generate the thoracic imaginal discs ofDrosophila. At hatching the wing disc is twice the size of the haltere disc, but the results suggest that both discs develop from a similar number of blastoderm cells. Two homeotic mutations, which transform the haltere into wing, affect embryonic growth but not the primordial number. All the segmental primordia may be of similar size and each may be similarly subdivided into a larger anterior, and a smaller posterior polyclone.  相似文献   

20.
This paper describes the aggregation in vitro of cells dissociated from imaginal discs and demonstrates the sorting out of undifferentiated cells from different imaginal discs and from differently determined regions of the same imaginal disc, as well as the abilities of such cells to undergo pattern reconstruction when injected into larvae. Dissociated cells begin to aggregate by 1.5 hr of rotation. By 5 hr of rotation, large aggregates of loosely associated cells appear. By 18 hr the aggregates have condensed and taken on a characteristic epithelial structure. To study sorting out in undifferentiated cells, we combined a histochemical stain for acid phosphatase with the use of the acid phosphatase null mutant acphn-11. We performed cell mixing experiments with 0-2 (prospective notum) and 2-8 (prospective wing) fragments, with the A and P (prospective anterior and posterior) fragments of the dorsal mesothoracic disc and with mixtures of cells from ventral prothoracic and dorsal mesothoracic discs. We found that prospective anterior and posterior dorsal mesothoracic cells do not sort out, but that prospective notum and wing and leg and wing cells do. The results from differentiated implants are consistent with those from undifferentiated mixes.  相似文献   

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