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1.
Summary A temperature-sensitive cell autonomous mutation ofDrosophila, l(1)ts-1126 (1–16±2), that affects the rate of cell division is described. When mutant animals are exposed to the restrictive temperature of 29°C during the first and second larval stages, the growth rate of the larvae is retarded. A delay in pupariation occurs during which larvae reach their full size, and the resulting flies are normal. When mutant animals are exposed to restrictive temperature during the third larval stage, growth is also retarded but no delay in pupariation occurs, and the resulting flies are reduced in size. Their small size is due in part to a decreased number of cells and in part to a smaller size of the cells.X-ray induced, marked, homozygousl(1)ts-1126 clones in an otherwise normal animal, are smaller in animals exposed to pulses of restrictive temperature when compared to clones in animals kept at permissive temperature of 22°C. Clone size decreases as pulse length increases. Clones on the wing blade induced 24 h after oviposition are smaller than clones induced at 48 h in animals grown at restrictive temperature. This result is interpreted as an inability of the slower dividingl(1)ts-1126 cells to survive when in competition with wildtype cells. The distribution of survivingl(1)ts-1126 clones in gynandromorphs grown at restrictive temperature supports this conclusion.  相似文献   

2.
Analysis of the development of Delta (Dl) temperature-sensitive mutants pulsed at restrictive temperature during larval and pupal stages reveals multiple phenocritical periods during which reduction of Dl function affects viability and development of adult structures. Dl function is required during the third larval instar for post-pupal viability and during the first day of pupal development for viability through eclosion. Dl function is required biphasically for the development of sensory bristles. Earlier pulses lead to bristle multiplication and later pulses lead to bristle loss. The exact intervals during which multiplication and loss are induced vary for different bristles. Dl function is also required for development of most, if not all, cell types in the retina. Different pulses result in reduction in eye size, scarring, and glossiness, as well as multiplication and loss of interommatidial bristles. We also define intervals during which Dl function is required for aspects of leg and wing development. Phenocritical periods for Dl function are temporally coincident with those previously reported for Notch (N), consistent with the hypothesis that the proteins encoded by Dl and N interact throughout development to assure correct specification of cell fates in a variety of imaginal tissues.  相似文献   

3.
A temperature-sensitive (ts) third chromosome Minute (M) mutation, designated Q-III, has been recovered and characterized. Q-III heterozygotes raised at 29° exhibit all of the dominant traits of M mutants including small bristles, rough eyes, prolonged development, reduced viability and interactions with several unrelated mutations. Q-III homozygotes raised at 29° are lethal; death occurs primarily during the first larval instar. When raised at 22°, Q-III heterozygotes are phenotypically normal and Q-III homozygotes display moderate M traits. In addition, Q-III elicits ts sterility and maternal-effect lethality. As it true of M lesions, the dominant traits of Q-III are not expressed in triploid females raised at 29°. Complementation tests suggest that Q-III is a ts allele of M(3)LS4, which is located in 3L near the centromere.—Reciprocal temperature-shift experiments revealed that the temperature-sensitive period (TSP) of Q-III lethality is polyphasic, extending from the first instar to the latter half of pupation. Heat-pulse experiments further resolved this into two post-embryonic TSPs: one occurring during the latter half of the second larval instar, and the other extending from the larval/pupal boundary to the second half of pupation. In addition, heat pulses elicited a large number of striking adult phenotypes in Q-III individuals. These included pattern alterations such as deficiencies and duplications and other morphological defects in structures produced by the eye-antennal, leg, wing and genital imaginal discs and the abdominal histoblasts. Each defect or pattern alteration is associated with a specific TSP during development.—We favor the interpretation that most of the major Q-III defects, particularly the structural duplications and deficiencies, result from temperature-induced cell death in mitotically active imaginal anlagen, while the small macrochaete phene probably results from the direct effects of Q-III on bristle synthesis. The hypothesis that the Q-III locus specifices a component required for protein synthesis is discussed, and it is concluded that this hypothesis can account for the pleiotropy of Q-III, and that perhaps it can be extended to M loci in general.  相似文献   

4.
The heat-sensitive, lethal mutation l(3)c43hs1 (3–49.0) produces wide variety of defects in the imaginal discs of Drosophila melanogaster. At permissive temperatures (20°C or lower), homozygotes are viable, but sterile. At 22°C, lethality occurs during the late pupal stage, and at 25°C or higher, lethality occurs during the third larval instar. The imaginal-disc abnormalities observed after exposure to restrictive temperatures include: deficiencies of head structures, duplications and deficiencies of the antenna, a homeotic transformation of the arista to tarsus, duplications and deficiencies of wing and haltere structures, differentiation of amorphous cuticular material in the wing blade, an increase in the number of sex-comb teeth, and disruption of the normal segmentation of the tarsus. Exposure to 27°C for 24 hr at different times in the life cycle revealed that each of these defects has a characteristic temperature-sensitive period (TSP) during the larval stages. Injection of wing discs before and after their TSP showed that the mutation is expressed autonomously. These results are discussed in relation to the role that the l(3)c43+ gene plays in the development of imaginal discs.  相似文献   

5.
Lethal mutations which cause imaginal disc abnormalities in Drosophila melanogaster identify genes whose function is necessary for normal disc development, and these mutant genes may be used as probes of the role of their wild-type alleles in normal development. It is crucial to the interpretation of the disc phenotype of such mutants to know which abnormalities are autonomous (caused by expression of the mutant gene in imaginal cells) and which are nonautonomous (indirectly caused, for example, by expression of the mutant gene in larval cells). We chose for study l(3)c21R (3-67.8), a late-larval lethal mutation with a complex phenotype, to test the adequacy of available techniques for assessing autonomy. We employed surgical and genetic techniques to determine the imaginal cell autonomy of the defects in cell viability, growth, and differentiation in c21R discs. The imaginal cell viability defect is nonautonomous. The disc growth and differentiation defects are autonomous; however, in genetic mosaics these two autonomous defects are separable. These results show that c21R belongs to the class of mutations which affect both larval and imaginal cells. In combination, the available methods were adequate to resolve the issue of autonomy in this complex case. However, in isolation several of the methods could have led to incomplete or misleading interpretations. This emphasizes that to analyze any developmental mutant it is necessary to examine the issue of autonomy from several points of view.  相似文献   

6.
Cell proliferation in Drosophila imaginal discs appears to be regulated by a disc-intrinsic mechanism involving local cell interactions that also control the formation of patterns of differentiation. This growth-control mechanism breaks down in animals homozygous for the mutation lethal (2) giant discs (l(2)gd) which remain as larvae for up to 9 days longer than normal. During this time cell proliferation continues in the imaginal discs as well as in the imaginal rings for the salivary glands, foregut, and hindgut, so that these tissues become greatly overgrown. When wild-type wing discs from mid-third instar larvae were removed and cultured for up to 28 days in wild-type female adult hosts, they grew and terminated growth at a cell number close to that which would be attained in situ by the time of pupariation. On the other hand, wing discs from l(2)gd homozygotes grew rapidly and continuously when cultivated in wild-type hosts, reached an enormous size, and acquired abnormal folding patterns. Overgrowth of mutant imaginal rings also continued during culture of these tissues in wild-type hosts. We conclude that overgrowth in this mutant is due to an autonomous defect in the imaginal primordia, which requires an extended larval period for its expression in situ.  相似文献   

7.
During Drosophila metamorphosis, larval tissues, such as the salivary glands, are histolysed whereas imaginal tissues differentiate into adult structures forming at eclosion a fly-shaped adult. Inactivation of the lethal(2)giant larvae (l(2)gl) gene encoding the cytoskeletal associated p127 protein, causes malignant transformation of brain neuroblasts and imaginal disc cells with developmental arrest at the larval-pupal transition phase. At this stage, p127 is expressed in wild-type salivary glands which become fully histolysed 12 - 13 h after pupariation. By contrast to wild-type, administration of 20-hydroxyecdsone to l(2)gl-deficient salivary glands is unable to induce histolysis, although it releases stored glue granules and gives rise to a nearly normal pupariation chromosome puffing, indicating that p127 is required for salivary gland apoptosis. To unravel the l(2)gl function in this tissue we used transgenic lines expressing reduced ( approximately 0.1) or increased levels of p127 (3.0). Here we show that the timing of salivary gland histolysis displays an l(2)gl-dose response. Reduced p127 expression delays histolysis whereas overexpression accelerates this process without affecting the duration of third larval instar, prepupal and pupal development. Similar l(2)gl-dependence is noticed in the timing of expression of the cell death genes reaper, head involution defective and grim, supporting the idea that p127 plays a critical role in the implementation of ecdysone-triggered apoptosis. These experiments show also that the timing of salivary gland apoptosis can be manipulated without affecting normal development and provide ways to investigate the nature of the components specifically involved in the apoptotic pathway of the salivary glands.  相似文献   

8.
The relative DNA content of Drosophila melanogaster imaginal leg disc nuclei during larval growth and pupal and adult differentiation was measured by microspectrophotometry. During the larval proliferative phase there were twice as many nuclei in the 4C class as nuclei in the 2C class. At the end of the third larval instar, the proportion of nuclei with a 4C DNA value increased. By 3 hr after pupariation, during pupal cuticle secretion, 90% of the nuclei were in this class. After pupal apolysis which occurs at 12 hr after pupariation, the 4C to 2C ratio was reversed. The increase in the proportion of nuclei with a 2C value was observed until 24 hr after pupariation when 90% of the nuclei were in this class. We propose that most cells divide at least once between pupal and adult differentiation. All of these changes in the cell cycle were correlated temporally with changes in the ecdysteroid titers that occur during these periods.  相似文献   

9.
The temperature-sensitive mutant l(3)c43hs1 is lethal at the restrictive temperature late in the last larval instar and has wing disks that show excessive growth when larvae are reared at 25 degrees C. Such mutant disks give rise to defective wings showing duplications and deficiencies. Abnormal folding patterns are localized to the region between the wing pouch and the area where adepithelial cells are found; the disks retain an epithelial morphology. Apoptotic cell death is distributed throughout the wing disks without any obvious concentration of dead cells in a specific area. Cell death is seen as early as 12 hr after a shift to the restrictive temperature. Temperature shift experiments also show that cell death precedes the onset of overgrowth, but since the spatial distribution of death is not localized to the regions of abnormal folds, it is unlikely that cell death and overgrowth are causally related.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The development of cuticular patterns in the legs ofDrosophila melanogaster was studied in the temperature-sensitive cell autonomous lethal mutant1 (1)ts726 by treating animals with heat pulses of two days' duration at different developmental stages, in order to find out whether or not models which account for regulation of imaginal discs in the late third instar also hold for earlier developmental periods. Eight kinds of phenotypes were found, each of which occurred only after heat pulses that started at particular time: (1) complete and incomplete mirror image duplications of mesothoracic legs: early second instar; (2) homoeotic transformation to wing hinge in mesothoracic legs: early second instar; (3) prothoracic leg fusions: early second instar; (4) hypertrophied sex combs: early third instar; (5) outgrowths: early third instar; (6) sex comb teeth on second tarsal segment: early third instar; (7) reversed bristle polarity in intersegmental membrane gaps: early third instar; (8) deleted individual bristles: middle of third instar. These phenotypes were compared with patterns predicted by two models that have been devised to account for regeneration data: the polar coordinate model, and the gradient-of-morphogenetic-potential model. Some of the data (especially the finding of circumferentially incomplete partial duplicates) are more readily predicted by the polar coordinate model, although neither model can be ruled out. Phenotypes (6) and (7) can be accounted for by postulating a tandemly repeated positional signal corresponding to tarsal segmentation. The homoeotic transformation may be due to a transdetermination event occurring in situ during regulative growth following cell death. Since deletion of individual sex comb teeth leads to altered sex comb rotation, it is suggested that adjacent sex comb tooth cells interact during rotation.Address until September 1978: Institute of Molecular Biology, Billrothstraße 11, 5020 Salzburg, Austria  相似文献   

11.
The temperature-sensitive mutant l(3)c43hs1 is lethal at the restrictive temperature late in the last larval instar and has wing disks that show excessive growth when larvae are reared at 25°C. Such mutant disks give rise to defective wings showing duplications and deficiencies. Abnormal folding patterns are localized to the region between the wing pouch and the area where adepithelial cells are found; the disks retain an epithelial morphology. Apoptotic cell death is distributed throughout the wing disks without any obvious concentration of dead cells in a specific area. Cell death is seen as early as 12 hr after a shift to the restrictive temperature. Temperature shift experiments also show that cell death precedes the onset of overgrowth, but since the spatial distribution of death is not localized to the regions of abnormal folds, it is unlikely that cell death and overgrowth are causally related.  相似文献   

12.
The mutation ee often produces an ectopic eye on the vertex that is a mirror image partial duplication of the normal eye on the ipsilateral side of the head. The pattern of the duplication and a clonal analysis by mitotic recombination indicate that the duplications are of dorsal eye and orbital structures. Large ectopic eyes (more than 100 ommatidia) and their surrounding bristles may be produced without cuticular deficiencies. The penetrance of ee is temperature dependent with penetrance higher (72%) at 25 degrees and 29 degrees than at 19 degrees (43%). Temperature shift experiments show two temperature-sensitive periods: one at midembryogenesis, the other at mid-first larval instar. Microscopic examination of ee late-second and third instar imaginal cephalic discs show no indication of growth of the extra tissue needed to produce the duplication until after mid-third instar. This was confirmed by cell counts of ee and wild-type discs. There is no evidence of differential cell death in the two types of discs at this stage, although much earlier cell death is postulated. Tests for cell autonomy of the mutation by the production of morphogenetic clones suggest nonautonomy. Formation of pattern duplications by mutant genes is discussed in terms of cell death that eliminates whole developmental compartments, restricted cell death that occurs within a compartment, extensive cell death within a compartment and proliferative growth unassociated with cell lethality.  相似文献   

13.
When imaginal disks from first and early second instar larvae of Drosophila are transplanted into larval hosts that are ready to pupate, they are unable to differentiate adult structures. The disks gradually become competent to respond with imaginal differentiation towards the end of the second larval instar (Fig. 1). The first sign of imaginal differentiation is a light-orange pigment that appears in the presumptive eye region when eye-antennal disks from early second instar larvae were subjected to immediate metamorphosis. This pigment was identified as being composed of ommochromes and drosopterins.Incompetent eye-antennal disks from early second instar donors were cultured in adult females for 2 to 5 days, and then retransplanted into late third instar larval hosts. If the adult host flies were kept on standard food the disks grew by cell multiplication (Fig. 2c) and became competent to undergo imaginal differentiation (Fig. 3). If, on the other hand, the adult hosts were starved on a protein-free sugar diet, cell divisions were effectively blocked in the disks. These did not noticeably grow (Fig. 2b) and remained incompetent (Fig. 3). The block caused by starvation proved to be reversible. Based on these results the hypothesis is advanced that the acquisition of competence requires a minimum number of cell divisions to take place in the disk primordium.  相似文献   

14.
15.
16.
We transplanted imaginal disks of Drosophila melanogaster from larvae of the second half of the third larval instar into prepupae. Disks from the youngest donors differentiated bristles of only the distal segments of the leg. These disks also produced unusually large areas of cuticle that had no bristles. Disks from older donors differentiated bristles of more proximal segments and the area of cuticle with no bristles was reduced. To account for the regional variation in these results, there must be regional differences among the prospective leg cells at some time during the period from the second half of the third larval instar to the end of adult bristle differentiation. We asked whether prospective distal cells were more advanced than prospective proximal cells during bristle differentiation. We estimated when bristle precursor cells undergo their final cell divisions by heavily irradiating prepupae and pupae. We assumed that cells that were insensitive to the radiation had completed their cell divisions. The distal segments were the first to have insensitive bristles. Most leg bristles became insensitive between 12 and 18 hr after pupariation. The tarsus had a larger proportion of its bristles insensitive than the femur at 15 hr after pupariation. We also investigated when bristle-forming cells begin elongating their bristle shafts. We used the length of bristle rudiments as an indicator of when elongation is initiated. At 35 hr after pupariation, bristle rudiments of distal segments were two to three times longer than bristle rudiments of proximal segments. We discuss how these intersegmental differences observed during bristle differentiation can account for the regional variation in response of discs transplanted into older hosts. However, we do not exclude the possibility that regional differences among cells of the leg tissue exist at stages earlier than the time of bristle differentiation.  相似文献   

17.
When final (5th) instar larvae of Precis coenia were treated with the juvenile hormone analog (JHA) methoprene, they underwent a supernumerary larval molt, except for certain regions of their imaginal disks, which deposited a normal pupal cuticle. Evidently those regions had already become irreversibly committed to pupal development at the time JHA was applied. By applying JHA at successively later times in the instar, the progression of pupal commitment could be studied. Pupal commitment in the proboscis, antenna, eye, leg and wing imaginal disks occurred in disk-specific patterns. In each imaginal disk there were distinct initiation sites where pupal commitment began during the first few hours of the final larval instar, and from which commitment spread across the remainder of the disk over a 2- to 3-day period. The initiation sites were not always located in homologous regions of the various disks. As a rule, pupal commitment also spread from imaginal disk tissue to surrounding epidermal tissue. The regions of pupal commitment in all disks except those of the wings, coincided with the regions of growth of the disk. Only portions of the disk that had undergone cell division and growth underwent pupal commitment. Shortening the growth period did not prevent pupal commitment in the wing imaginal disk, indicating that, in this disk at least, a normal number of cell divisions was not crucial in reprogramming of disk cells for pupal cuticle synthesis. The apparent growth spurt of imaginal disks that occurs during the last part of the final larval instar is merely the final stage of normal and constant exponential growth. Juvenile hormone (JH) and ecdysteroids appeared to play little role in the regulation of normal imaginal disk growth. Instead, growth of the disks may be under intrinsic control. Interestingly, even though endogenous fluctuation in JH titers do not affect imaginal disk growth, exogenous JHA proved able to inhibit both pupal commitment, cell movement, and growth of the disks during the last larval instar. This function of JH could be important under certain adverse conditions, such as when metamorphosis is delayed in favor of a supernumerary larval molt.  相似文献   

18.
19.
不同龄期幼虫饥饿对美国白蛾Hyphantria cunea(Drury)生长发育和繁殖影响的研究结果表明:美国白蛾低龄(2龄)幼虫短时间的饥饿对其生长发育和繁殖的影响不明显;美国白蛾中龄(4龄)幼虫饥饿2,4,6d使美国白蛾的历期相应增长,存活率、化蛹率、羽化率、产卵量都相应降低,交配率与对照之间没有差异;老熟(6龄)幼虫短时间饥饿(4d)的存活率、羽化率、交配率、产卵量都稍有下降;长时间饥饿(12d)的老熟幼虫有70%左右因饥饿而提前化蛹,提前化蛹的蛹体外没有薄茧的包裹。提前化蛹的美国白蛾的羽化率、交配率均非常低,产卵量很少。  相似文献   

20.
In Drosophila, like most ectotherms, development at low temperature reduces growth rate but increases final adult size. Cultures were shifted from 25 degrees C to low (16.5 degrees C) or to high (29 degrees C) temperature at regular intervals through larval and pupal stages, and the flies of both sexes showed an increase or decrease, respectively, in the size of thorax, wing and abdominal tergite. Size changes in the wing blade resulted from changes in the size of the epidermal cells (with only a small increase in cell number in males reared at low temperature). The temperature-shifts became less effective as they were made at successively later developmental stages, demonstrating a cumulative effect of temperature on adult size. The thorax and wing develop from the same imaginal disc, with most cell division occurring in larval stages, but they differ in timing of temperature sensitivity, which extends only to pupariation or into the late pupal stage, respectively. Growth of the adult abdomen occurs largely after pupariation but its size is temperature-sensitive through both larval and pupal stages. We discuss growth control in Drosophila and the likely effects of temperature on food assimilation, growth efficiency and allocation of nutrients to the production of different tissues.  相似文献   

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