共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
2.
3.
4.
Genetic rescue of muscle defects associated with a mutant Drosophila melanogaster tropomyosin allele. 下载免费PDF全文
We describe a genetic transformation system which should prove useful for investigating tropomyosin assembly and function. Muscle abnormalities associated with a defective tropomyosin allele were corrected by integrating the wild-type gene into germ line chromosomes. The transformation protocol permits application of directed mutagenesis techniques in investigations of contractile regulatory mechanisms. 相似文献
5.
A Fausto-Sterling 《Developmental biology》1978,63(2):358-369
In order to analyze the effects of the mutation fused (fu) on vein pattern formation, wings mosaic for fused and non-fused tissue were obtained. Analysis of these wings (1) confirmed that fused does not involve the production of a freely diffusible substance; (2) showed that a genotypically fu fourth longitudinal vein (LV 4) develops a normal phenotype nonautonomously if the third longitudinal vein (LV 3) and most of the first posterior cell are non-fused; (3) showed that in the reciprocal situation, a non-fused fourth longitudinal vein often exhibited autonomous differentiation; (4) demonstrated that small groups of cells (either fu or non-fu) could be incorporated into structures characteristic of the opposite genotype; and (5) offered evidence that the dorsal wing surface may play an important role in the control of vein formation. Additionally, the fused phenotype itself was examined in some detail, and the anterior-posterior compartment border was defined. This examination suggests that in the more extreme cases LV 4 does not fuse with LV 3, but simply fails to form. 相似文献
6.
Transformation of Drosophila melanogaster with the wild-type myosin heavy-chain gene: rescue of mutant phenotypes and analysis of defects caused by overexpression 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2 下载免费PDF全文
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,126(3):689-699
We have transformed Drosophila melanogaster with a genomic construct containing the entire wild-type myosin heavy-chain gene, Mhc, together with approximately 9 kb of flanking DNA on each side. Three independent lines stably express myosin heavy-chain protein (MHC) at approximately wild-type levels. The MHC produced is functional since it rescues the mutant phenotypes of a number of different Mhc alleles: the amorphic allele Mhc1, the indirect flight muscle and jump muscle-specific amorphic allele Mhc10, and the hypomorphic allele Mhc2. We show that the Mhc2 mutation is due to the insertion of a transposable element in an intron of Mhc. Since a reduction in MHC in the indirect flight muscles alters the myosin/actin protein ratio and results in myofibrillar defects, we determined the effects of an increase in the effective copy number of Mhc. The presence of four copies of Mhc results in overabundance of the protein and a flightless phenotype. Electron microscopy reveals concomitant defects in the indirect flight muscles, with excess thick filaments at the periphery of the myofibrils. Further increases in copy number are lethal. These results demonstrate the usefulness and potential of the transgenic system to study myosin function in Drosophila. They also show that overexpression of wild-type protein in muscle may disrupt the function of not only the indirect flight but also other muscles of the organism. 相似文献
7.
8.
The development of the Drosophila wing involves progressive patterning events. In the second larval instar, cells of the wing disc are allotted wing or notum
fates by a wingless-mediated process and dorsal or ventral fates by the action of apterous and wingless. Notch-mediated signalling is required for the expression of the genes vestigial and scalloped in the presumptive wing blade. Later, wingless, Notch and cut are involved in cell fate specification along the wing margin. The function of scalloped in this process is not well understood and is the focus of this study.
We show that patterning downstream of Notch and wingless pathways is altered in scalloped mutants. Reduction in scalloped expression results in a loss of expression of wing blade- and margin-specific markers. Misexpression of scalloped in the presumptive wing causes misexpression of scalloped, vestigial and wingless reporter genes. However, high levels of scalloped expression have a negative influence on wingless, vestigial and its own expression. Our results demonstrate that scalloped functions in a level-dependent manner in the presumptive wing blade in a loop that involves vestigial and itself. We suggest that wing development requires the regulated expression of scalloped together with vestigial–the ”wing formation” effects of Vestigial in other imaginal discs are probably due to its interaction with the scalloped gene product normally expressed in these discs.
Received: 6 May 1998 / Accepted: 22 July 1998 相似文献
9.
Distribution of the enzyme aldehyde oxidase (AO) within the pouch of the mature wing disc is precise and differential. General locations of compartmental boundaries have been identified by fate mapping and studies of AO distribution. The suspected locations of the boundaries were verified by analyzing the distribution of AO-negative cells within an AO-stained background in gynandromorphs and in X-ray-induced clones of AO-negative cells. The anterior/posterior border appeared slightly anterior to the junction of the AO+ anterior presumptive wing surfaces and AO? posterior wing surfaces. A narrow band of AO+ cells extending proximodistally on both presumptive wing surfaces belongs to the posterior compartment. Two dorsal/ventral (dor./vent.) restrictions were found. The dor./vent. restriction equivalent to the dor./vent. border found in the adult wing was located at the ventral most edge of the AO-stained presumptive wing margin. A second restriction which was less strictly obeyed was found on the dorsal edge of the wing margin. We conclude that the whole presumptive wing margin is part of the dorsal compartment. Within the anterior wing margin an intensively stained oval was also found to be clonally restrictive. Therefore, territories were found within the prospective wing margin for which no such features have been identified in the adult Drosophila melanogaster wing. 相似文献
10.
11.
O. O. Bilousov V. L. Katanaev S. V. Demydov I. A. Kozeretska 《Cytology and Genetics》2013,47(2):124-127
During maturation Drosophila wing epithelial cells undergo number of changes due to processes, which take place in the wing of the newly emerged fly, among which epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and apoptosis are pivotal. It is considered that neurohormone bursicon is responsible for their triggering. In turn, extracellular matrix protein Miniature is also essential for proper progress of apoptosis and, presumably, EMT. In accordance with our previously proposed hypothesis, Miniature and bursicon form stabilizing/accumulative complexes, which are able to diffuse freely within Drosophila wing, in such a way constitutively promoting enough concentrations of the maturation triggering signal. Here we tried to come to confirmation of our hypothesis from the other side, using UAS/GAL4 system and RNAi-silencing techniques. 相似文献
12.
13.
14.
The fate of an imaginal disc cell of Drosophila can be affected by the associations and interactions that it has with other cells in the disc. A fragment of an imaginal disc, not regenerating under conditions allowing a complementary fragment to do so, can be stimulated to regenerate by interactions with cells of the complementary fragment [Haynie, J. L., and Bryant, P. J. (1976) Nature (London)259, 659–662]. We report here that one nonregenerating fragment of an imaginal wing disc cannot be stimulated to regenerate by interactions with cells from other parts of the disc. This fragment, containing the anlagen of the distal wing, fails to regenerate proximally when combined with a proximal fragment even though this association stimulates some proximal fragments to regenerate distally. We suggest that this may be a phenomenon similar to that observed in cockroach legs by H. Bohn (1970, Wilhelm Roux Arch. Entwicklungsmech. Organismen165, 303–341), in which proximal regeneration from grafted distal leg segments proceeds only to a limited extent. We consider the possibility that there exist reiterated sets of positional information arranged concentrically in the wing disc. 相似文献
15.
16.
17.
Genetic rescue has been proposed as a management strategy to improve the fitness of genetically eroded populations by alleviating inbreeding depression. We studied the dynamics of genetic rescue in inbred populations of Drosophila. Using balancer chromosomes, we show that the force of heterosis that accompanies genetic rescue is large and allows even a recessive lethal to increase substantially in frequency in the rescued populations, particularly at stress temperatures. This indicates that deleterious alleles present in the immigrants can increase significantly in frequency in the recipient population when they are in linkage disequilibrium with genes responsible for the heterosis. In a second experiment we rescued eight inbred Drosophila populations with immigrants from two other inbred populations and observe: (i) there is a significant increase in viability both 5 and 10 generations after the rescue event, showing that the increase in fitness is not transient but persists long-term. (ii) The lower the fitness of the recipient population the larger the fitness increase. (iii) The increase in fitness depends significantly on the origin of the rescuers. The immigrants used were fixed for a conditional lethal that was mildly deleterious at 25°C but lethal at 29°C. By comparing fitness at 25°C (the temperature during the rescue experiment) and 29°C, we show that the lethal allele reached significant frequencies in most rescued populations, which upon renewed inbreeding became fixed in part of the inbred lines. In conclusion, in addition to the fitness increase genetic rescue can easily result in a substantial increase in the frequency of mildly deleterious alleles carried by the immigrants. This can endanger the rescued population greatly when it undergoes recurrent inbreeding. However, using a sufficient number of immigrants and to accompany the rescue event with the right demographic measures will overcome this problem. As such, genetic rescue still is a viable option to manage genetically eroded populations. 相似文献
18.
In the Drosophila flightless mutant Ifm(3)3, a transposable element inserted into the alternatively spliced fourth exon of the tropomyosin I (TmI) gene prevents proper expression of Ifm-TmI, the tropomyosin isoform found in indirect flight muscle. We have rescued the flightless phenotype of Ifm(3)3 flies using P-element-mediated transformation with a segment of the Drosophila genome containing the wild-type TmI gene plus 2.5 kb of 5' flanking and 2 kb of 3' flanking DNA. The inserted TmI gene is expressed with the proper developmental and tissue specificity, although its level of expression varies among the five transformed lines examined. These conclusions are based on analyses of flight, myofibrillar morphology, and TmI RNA and protein levels. A minimum of two copies of the inserted TmI gene per cell is necessary to restore flight to most of the flies in each line. We also show that the Ifm-TmI isoform is expressed in the leg muscle of wild-type flies and is decreased in Ifm(3)3 leg muscle. Homozygous Ifm(3)3 mutants do not jump. The ability to jump can be restored with a single copy of the wild-type TmI gene per cell. 相似文献
19.
《Developmental biology》1986,115(1):233-248
Lyra is a dominant, homozygous lethal mutation of Drosophila melanogaster; in heterozygotes the wings lack portions of the anterior and posterior margins including the characteristic bristles. We have found that, in addition to the loss of bristle forming cells, there is a decrease in the number of wing surface cells that varies between 10 and 20%. However, we observed no histological evidence of excessive cell death in either the larval discs or the pupal wing precursors in Lyra flies. Restoration of all or part of the normal wing margins occurs in some, but not all, cases of morphogenetic mosaics, in which there were patches of wild-type cells in Lyra wing margins due to irradiation-induced mitotic recombination. Analysis of these restorations, using margin bristles as indicators, shows that the Lyra wild-type gene is not involved in bristle formation per se and further that its expression is not cell autonomous. Instead the effect of the Lyra mutation appears to be associated with development of a margin forming subpopulation of cells and to influence the characteristic pattern of cells and bristles in the wing margin via an inductive interaction. The dorsal-ventral boundary can be demonstrated in the de facto wing margins of Lyra mutants suggesting that its origin is independent of any function Lyra might have in normal wing margin morphogenesis. In wing margin restorations the dorsal-ventral boundary is clearly delimited by trichomes and somewhat less rigorously shown by the margin bristles. Further, in these restorations ventral clones induce dorsal bristles, as well as ventral ones, and vice versa, indicating that the influence of Lyra is not restricted by the dorsal-ventral boundary. 相似文献
20.
Summary We have screened for dominant enhancers and suppressors of the wing phenotype associated with two Delta alleles: Dl
9P39, an amorphic allele, and Dl
FE32, an antimorphic allele. The interactions of some of the modifiers with Delta are due to haplo-insufficient expression of the corresponding genes. Although not explicitly shown for the remaining cases, we assume that haploin-sufficiency is also the basis for the relationships of these genes to Delta, since no allele specific interactions were observed. The modifiers found define 22 genes with pleiotropic expression, which can be classified into two groups: genes required for wing vein pattern formation and for neurogenesis, and genes which are not required for neurogenesis. Among the genes of the first group, Hairless and Star were previously known to participate in neural development. One further modifier was found which may correspond to a new neurogenic gene. The second group of genes is larger and includes already known loci, e.g., Plexate, blistered, plexus, etc, as well as other previously unidentified genes, which function during wing morphogenesis.
Correspondence to: J.A. Campos-Ortega 相似文献