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1.
2.
Summary Mutations of the bithorax complex result in segmental transformations in the thorax and abdomen ofDrosophila. The haltere discs from larvae homozygous forbx 3 orpbx are transformed so that the discs contain cells that will produce wing cuticle as well as cells that produce haltere cuticle. The pattern regulation behavior of these discs has been examined. The fate maps of the two discs were established, and then the regulative behavior of a number of fragments from both types of mutant discs was established by culturing the fragments in vivo prior to metamorphosis. The most important conclusion from this work is that the cells producing, haltere cuticle and wing cuticle within the same disc share the same positional information and that they communicate during pattern regulation.  相似文献   

3.
Body size in Drosophila larvae, like in other animals, is controlled by nutrition. Nutrient restriction leads to catabolic responses in the majority of tissues, but the Drosophila mitotic imaginal discs continue growing. The nature of these differential control mechanisms that spare distinct tissues from starvation are poorly understood. Here, we reveal that the Ret-like receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK), Stitcher (Stit), is required for cell growth and proliferation through the PI3K-I/TORC1 pathway in the Drosophila wing disc. Both Stit and insulin receptor (InR) signaling activate PI3K-I and drive cellular proliferation and tissue growth. However, whereas optimal growth requires signaling from both InR and Stit, catabolic changes manifested by autophagy only occur when both signaling pathways are compromised. The combined activities of Stit and InR in ectodermal epithelial tissues provide an RTK-mediated, two-tiered reaction threshold to varying nutritional conditions that promote epithelial organ growth even at low levels of InR signaling.  相似文献   

4.
At the beginning of the final larval (fifth) instar of Manduca sexta, imaginal precursors including wing discs and eye primordia initiate metamorphic changes, such as pupal commitment, patterning and cell proliferation. Juvenile hormone (JH) prevents these changes in earlier instars and in starved final instar larvae, but nutrient intake overcomes this effect of JH in the latter. In this study, we show that a molecular marker of pupal commitment, broad, is up-regulated in the wing discs by feeding on sucrose or by bovine insulin or Manduca bombyxin in starved final instar larvae. This effect of insulin could not be prevented by JH. In vitro insulin had no effect on broad expression but relieved the suppression of broad expression by JH. This effect of insulin was directly on the disc as shown by its reduction in the presence of insulin receptor dsRNA. In starved penultimate fourth instar larvae, broad expression in the wing disc was not up-regulated by insulin. The discs became responsive to this action of insulin during the molt to the fifth instar together with the ability to become pupally committed in response to 20-hydroxyecdysone. Thus, the Manduca bombyxin acts as a metamorphosis-initiating factor in the imaginal precursors.  相似文献   

5.
Wing discs from late final-instar Ephestia larvae form only pupal cuticle when immediately implanted into pupae which subsequently undergo metamorphosis. However, either pupal or adult structures are made in vitro depending on (1) the ecdysterone dose and/or (2) disc cell proliferation. Continuous culture in ecdysterone (0.5–5.0 μg/ml) results in the appearance of transparent cuticle. On the basis of several criteria, this untanned cuticle is postulated to be scaleless adult cuticle. Discs pulsed with 0.5 μg/ml ecdysterone for 48–120 hr, or with 5.0 μg/ml for 24 hr, formed tanned cuticle. Lower doses of ecdysterone (i.e., 0.5 μg/ml for 24 hr or continuous exposure to 0.05 μg/ml) trigger adult scale formation. Enhancement of [3H]thymidine incorporation by these latter doses suggests the occurrence of disc cell divisions and polyploidization. The choice between pupal and adult pathways by wing discs of this age can be controlled exclusively by ecdysterone; juvenile hormone need not be involved in vitro.  相似文献   

6.
Summary These experiments examined whether inDrosophila immature imaginal disc tissue and tissues from embryonic stages can influence pattern regulation in a disc fragment in the same way as can mature imaginal discs. Immature imaginal discs, or the cells of whole embryos, were mixed with a test fragment (presumptive notum) from a mature wing disc. The immature tissues in each mixture were genetically marked and had been heavily irradiated (25 Kr gamma) prior to mixing to prevent growth and maturation during subsequent culture in vivo. Alteration of the regulative behavior of the test fragment (that is, regeneration of wing) thus provided an assay for the communication of positional information by the immature tissues. The results suggest that this capacity arises well before competence to metamorphose, as early as the 16th hour of embryonic development, whereas prior to 16 h, essentially no stimulation of regeneration occurred. It is suggested that the imaginal disc (or presumptive disc) cells of the embryo may have been responsible for this early stimulatory capacity.  相似文献   

7.
The wing imaginal disc of Drosophila melanogaster is a prominent experimental system for research on control of cell growth, proliferation and death, as well as on pattern formation and morphogenesis during organogenesis. The precise genetic methodology applicable in this system has facilitated conceptual advances of fundamental importance for developmental biology. Experimental accessibility and versatility would gain further if long term development of wing imaginal discs could be studied also in vitro. For example, culture systems would allow live imaging with maximal temporal and spatial resolution. However, as clearly demonstrated here, standard culture methods result in a rapid cell proliferation arrest within hours of cultivation of dissected wing imaginal discs. Analysis with established markers for cells in S- and M phase, as well as with RGB cell cycle tracker, a novel reporter transgene, revealed that in vitro cultivation interferes with cell cycle progression throughout interphase and not just exclusively during G1. Moreover, quantification of EGFP expression from an inducible transgene revealed rapid adverse effects of disc culture on basic cellular functions beyond cell cycle progression. Disc transplantation experiments confirmed that these detrimental consequences do not reflect fatal damage of imaginal discs during isolation, arguing clearly for a medium insufficiency. Alternative culture media were evaluated, including hemolymph, which surrounds imaginal discs during growth in situ. But isolated larval hemolymph was found to be even less adequate than current culture media, presumably as a result of conversion processes during hemolymph isolation or disc culture. The significance of prominent growth-regulating pathways during disc culture was analyzed, as well as effects of insulin and disc co-culture with larval tissues as potential sources of endocrine factors. Based on our analyses, we developed a culture protocol that prolongs cell proliferation in cultured discs.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
This study was undertaken to evaluate the range of 20-hydroxyecdysone (20HE) concentrations which induce cell proliferation and imaginal differentiation in lepidopteran wing discs in vitro . Wing discs were cultured in medium containing various doses of 20HE. During imaginal differentiation in vitro , wing discs were observed histologically and the number of mitosis was counted every day. Wing discs differentiated adult features in medium containing 0.02–0.2 μg/mL 20HE, and these doses also increased the number of mitosis in disc cells. Wing discs developed the same in vitro as they do in vivo . The concentration of 20HE over 0.2 μg/mL inhibited both mitosis and imaginal differentiation. Cell proliferation, cuticle deposition and tissue elongation were successively observed in vitro the same as observed in vivo . These results suggest that a moderate concentration of ecdysteroid can induce cell proliferation followed by imaginal differentiation.  相似文献   

10.
Summary New cell lines, designated as ML-DmDl≈10, were established from dissociated imaginal discs ofDrosophila melanogaster. The culture medium was prepared by mixing in a 1:1 ratio Cross and Sang’s M3(BF) medium, supplemented with 10% heat inactivated fetal bovine serum (FBS), with the supernatant of a primary embryonic cell culture made in the M3(BF) medium and supplementing this mixture with insulin. One cell line was established in the medium containing larval hemolymph instead of the primary culture supernatan, and another was established in fresh M3(BF) medium supplemented with insulin and FBS. In these mediums, imaginal disc cells first formed aggregates and cellular vesicles within a few weeks followed by the proliferation of thin-layered cells around them after about 1 mo. Ten cell lines have so far been established from two kinds of imaginal discs and disc mixtures. The ploidy of these cell lines was predominantly diploid. Population doubling time was about 50 to 70 h at 3 to 10 mo. after initiation of the culture. When the cell aggregates formed in vitro were implanted in metamorphosing larvae, they differentiated at high frequency into adult cuticular strutures in the early phase of the primary culture. This differentiation of aggregates was also observed, though at low frequency, in a culture maintained by dilution-transfer for 6 to 15 mo. in vitro.  相似文献   

11.
The Drosophila wing imaginal disc is a tissue of undifferentiated cells that are precursors of the wing and most of the notum of the adult fly. The wing disc first forms during embryogenesis from a cluster of ∼30 cells located in the second thoracic segment, which invaginate to form a sac-like structure. They undergo extensive proliferation during larval stages to form a mature larval wing disc of ∼35,000 cells. During this time, distinct cell fates are assigned to different regions, and the wing disc develops a complex morphology. Finally, during pupal stages the wing disc undergoes morphogenetic processes and then differentiates to form the adult wing and notum. While the bulk of the wing disc comprises epithelial cells, it also includes neurons and glia, and is associated with tracheal cells and muscle precursor cells. The relative simplicity and accessibility of the wing disc, combined with the wealth of genetic tools available in Drosophila, have combined to make it a premier system for identifying genes and deciphering systems that play crucial roles in animal development. Studies in wing imaginal discs have made key contributions to many areas of biology, including tissue patterning, signal transduction, growth control, regeneration, planar cell polarity, morphogenesis, and tissue mechanics.  相似文献   

12.
We have established a primary culture system for Drosophila eye imaginal discs. With this system, we were able to obtain neurite outgrowth from intact eye discs, eye disc fragments, and dissociated eye imaginal disc cells. Immunoreactivity to antibody 24B10 indicates that these extending neurites are photoreceptor axons. Three culture media were tested for their ability to support the survival of and neurite extension from eye disc fragments in vitro at 23°C. These, with supplements, were: five parts of Schneider's Drosophila medium with four parts of basal Eagle's medium (“4+5”); Leibovitz's L-15 medium (L-15); and Shields and Sang's M3 modified medium (MM3). We obtained the best results with MM3 supplemented with 2% fetal bovine serum (FBS). Eye disc fragments survived in this medium for at least 20 days. Pigmentation in the nonphotoreceptor pigment cells in cultures from the prepupa required the presence of 20-hydroxyecdysone (20-HE) (1 μg/ml), whereas neurite outgrowth was seen in the absence of 20-HE. Donor animals had to fall within a range of ages to obtain appropriate eye disc differentiation in vitro. Eye discs from 5-h pupae (P+5) or older commenced ommachrome synthesis in vitro, in a temporal sequence close to that found in vivo, whereas the in vitro synthesis of this pigment was delayed in eye discs from younger flies. Average neurite length was not affected by age among pupae younger than P+5; but neurite outgrowth from P+24 was scarce, probably because by this time photoreceptor axons had already grown in vivo and were severed and unable to regenerate in vitro. Eye discs taken from third instar larvae or white prepupae continued their mitotic activity in vitro. Together with the advance of the morphogenetic furrow at the leading edge of retinal development, this observation is consistent with the evidence that pattern formation continues in vitro. Morphogenetic changes were manifested in cultures. Viability tests with calcein AM and ethidium bromide revealed few dead cells in living cultures. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
Aspects of the initial phase of aggregation in vitro of dissociated imaginal disc cells from Drosophila melanogaster are described. Using the methods described certain interdisc differences in the percent decrease in single cell units during the first hour of aggregation can be demonstrated. In addition it is shown that prospective notum cells isolated from the dorsal mesothoracic disc show less of a decrease than do prospective wing cells. This difference shows up in a variety of different wild-type stocks and in several mutant stocks as well. Prospective notum cells from the mutation fu59 show only a limited ability to adhere to one another, while the percentage of single cell units from prospective wing blade cells from r9 larvae grown on pyrimidine-poor medium decrease less compared to cells from the same stock grown on RNA-supplemented medium. There is a significantly greater decrease in the percent single cell units in cultures of prospective eye cells than in cultures of prospective antennal cells. Furthermore, cells from the antennal disc of larvae bearing the homeotic mutation ssa show a significantly lower decrease in single cell units when grown at restrictive temperatures. In contrast, antennal disc cells from the homeotic mutation ophthalmoptera; eyeless Dominant, a mutation which affects the eye disc, are unaffected, while cells from the eye disc are slightly less able to reassociate with one another.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of ecdysterone and juvenile hormone on protein synthesis and development of imaginal wing discs ofDrosophila melanogaster has been studied. It is found that juvenile hormone apparently does not inhibit the synthesis of the ecdysterone-inducible proteins, although wing disc development is inhibited to various extent by different juvenile hormones. It is suggested that the ecdysterone-inducible proteins are not involved directly in the initiation of wing disc evagination, it is possible that some of these proteins are involved in the maintenance of chromatin activities or they are involved in gene activation.  相似文献   

15.
Female adults of the bagworm moth, Eumeta variegata, are completely wingless; by contrast, the male adults have functional wings. Sex-specific differences in the development of wing discs appear to arise during the 8th (penultimate) larval instar. We have previously found that the wing discs of female E. variegata terminate development and disappear during the prepupal period, whereas the wing discs of males continue to develop fully into adult wings. We have investigated the effects of ecdysteroid (20-hydroxyecdysone, 20E) when cultured with larval wing discs, which are normally attached to the larval integument of both male and female larvae. Male wing discs cultured with 20E undergo a remarkable transformation: the discs undergo apolysis and then differentiation. Female wing discs cultured with 20E also undergo apolysis; however, the disc cells enter apoptosis. We have observed condensed chromatin, fragmented nuclei, and secondary lysosomes in the epithelial cells of these female discs. This report establishes that the reduction of female wing discs arises through apoptotic events triggered by ecdysteroid in vitro.  相似文献   

16.
The wingless mutant flügellos ( fl ) of the silkworm lacks all four wings. Although wing discs of the fl seem to develop normally until the fourth larval instar, wing morphogenesis stops after the fourth larval ecdysis, probably caused by aberrant expression of an unidentified factor, referred to as fl . To characterize factor fl , the wing discs dissected from the wild-type (WT) and fl larvae were transplanted into other larvae and developmental changes of the discs were examined. When the wing disc from a WT larva was transplanted into another WT larva and allowed to grow until emergence, a small wing appeared that was covered with scales. Thus, the transplanted wing discs can develop autonomously, form scales and evert from adult skin. The WT wing discs transplanted into the fl larvae also developed at a high rate. However, the fl wing discs transplanted into the WT larvae did not develop during the larval to pupal developmental stages. These data suggest that the fl gene product (factor fl) works in the wing disc cells during wing morphogenesis. Its function cannot be complemented by hemolymph in the WT larva. It is also implied that the level of humoral factors and hormones required for wing morphogenesis are normally maintained in the fl larva.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Imaginal wing discs ofPieris brassicae can be cultured in vitro for extended periods. Their ultrastructural development was investigated after culture in the presence of various concentrations of ecdysone and ecdysterone. When ecdysone or low concentrations of ecdysterone (2×10–7 M) were added to culture media, larval discs secreted a pupal cuticle and they subsequently differentiated scales; prepupal discs completed their imaginal development. With a higher concentration of ecdysterone (2×10–6 M), all discs produced abundant but fragmentary cuticular material.Prepupal discs were able to metabolize both hormones in vitro. Ecdysterone was mainly converted into a polar compound detectable after a short period of incubation. Ecdysone was transformed, at a slower rate, forming a polar compound and 26-hydroxyecdysone but no ecdysterone.  相似文献   

18.
The heat-sensitive mutation of Drosophila melanogaster l(3)c4(3)hs1, causes mutant larvae raised at a restrictive temperature to have abnormally large wing discs. The large size of these discs is a disc-autonomous property and results from an increase in the number rather than the size of wing disc cells. We have used wing discs from this mutant to further investigate properties of transdetermination which had previously been investigated with nonmutant discs. Transdetermination can occur in nonmutant discs when the proliferative phase of imaginal disc development is extended by wounding discs and culturing them in vivo. The results indicate that additional proliferation in the absence of wounding does not lead to transdetermination. There is a correlation between the extent of growth of a cultured disc and the probability that it will undergo transdetermination. The results suggest that this correlation does not depend on a differential rate of cell division. Finally, the results indicate that the cells which give rise to transdetermination are at an equivalent developmental stage no later than that characteristic of eye-antenna disc cells before the third larval instar.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Lepidopteran insects present a complex organization of appendages which develop by various mechanisms. In the mulberry silkworm,Bombyx mori a pair of meso- and meta-thoracic discs located on either side in the larvae gives rise to the corresponding fore- and hind-wings of the adult. These discs do not experience massive cell rearrangements during metamorphosis and display the adult wing vein pattern. We have analysed wing development inB. mori by two approaches, viz., expression of patterning genes in larval wing discs, and regulatory capacities of larval discs following explantation or perturbation. Expression of Nubbin is seen all over the presumptive wing blade domains unlike inDrosophila, where it is confined to the hinge and the wing pouch. Excision of meso- and meta-thoracic discs during the larval stages resulted in emergence of adult moths lacking the corresponding wings without any loss of thoracic tissues suggesting independent origin of wing and thoracic primordia. The expression of wingless and distal-less along the dorsal/ventral margin in wing discs correlated well with their expression profile in adultDrosophila wings. Partially excised wing discs did not showin situ regeneration or duplication suggesting their early differentiation. The presence of adult wing vein patterns discernible in larval wing discs and the patterns of marker gene expression as well as the inability of these discs to regulate growth suggested that wing differentiation is achieved early inB. mori. The timings of morphogenetic events are different and the wing discs behave like presumptive wing buds opening out as wing blades inB. mori unlike evagination of only the pouch region as wing blades seen inDrosophila.  相似文献   

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