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1.
Precise ultrastructural localization of Drosophila melanogaster pupal cuticle proteins (PCPs) was achieved by the immunogold labeling of frozen thin sections. PCPs were found in lamellate cuticle and intracellular vesicles but, curiously, were absent from the assembly zone of the cuticle. Antibodies that distinguish between the two classes of PCPs--low molecular weight (L-PCPs) and high molecular weight (H-PCPs)--revealed that the morphologically distinct outer lamellae contained L-PCPs and the inner lamellae contained H-PCPs. The sharp boundary between these two antigenic domains coincides with the transition from the outer to the inner lamellae, which in turn is correlated with the cessation of L-PCP synthesis and the initiation of H-PCP synthesis in response to 20-hydroxyecdysone (Doctor, J., D. Fristrom, and J.W. Fristrom, 1985, J. Cell Biol. 101:189-200). Hence, differences in protein composition are associated with differences in lamellar morphology.  相似文献   

2.
We investigated the synthesis and localization of Drosophila pupal cuticle proteins by immunochemical techniques using both a complex antiserum and monoclonal antibodies. A set of low molecular weight (15,000-25,000) pupal cuticle proteins are synthesized by the imaginal disk epithelium before pupation. After pupation, synthesis of the low molecular weight proteins ceases and a set of unrelated high molecular weight proteins (40,000-82,000) are synthesized and incorporated into the pupal cuticle. Ultrastructural changes in the cuticle deposited before and after pupation correlate with the switch in cuticle protein synthesis. A similar biphasic accumulation of low and high molecular weight pupal cuticle proteins is also seen in imaginal discs cultured in vitro. The low molecular weight pupal cuticle proteins accumulate in response to a pulse of the insect steroid hormone 20-hydroxyecdysone and begin to appear 6 h after the withdrawal of the hormone from the culture medium. The high molecular weight pupal cuticle proteins accumulate later in culture; a second pulse of hormone appears to be necessary for the accumulation of two of these proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Mass-isolated imaginal discs of Drosophila melanogaster form a chitin-containing pupal procuticle In vitro. Optimal procuticle deposition occurs when the discs are incubated for 4–6 hr with 0.5–1.0 μg/ml of 20-hydroxyecdysone and then with less than 0.05 μg/ml of 20-hydroxyecdysone. The formation of the chitin-containing procuticle is demonstrated using three independent assays: with fluorescene-conjugated cuticle proteins that bind to chitin; by electron microscopy; by incorporation of [3H]glucosamine into a chitin fraction. Synthesis and deposition of pupal cuticle proteins are also demonstrated. Incorporation of [3H]glucosamine into chitin is sensitive to inhibitors of protein, RNA and chitin synthesis, but has little sensitivity to inhibitors of DNA synthesis, and dolichol-dependent glycosylation.  相似文献   

4.
Pupal and larval cuticle proteins of Drosophila melanogaster   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Proteins, soluble in 7 M urea, were extracted from third-instar larval and pupal cuticles of Drosophila melanogaster. Both extracts contain a limited number of polypeptides resolved by one- or two-dimensional electrophoresis. The five major larval proteins have low molecular weights (less than 20000) and are not glycosylated. The major pupal cuticle proteins fall into two size classes: two with apparent molecular weights of 56K and 82K and four with molecular weights between 15K and 25K. The proteins with high apparent molecular weights are glycosylated. In nondenaturing gels, no components of the larval and pupal cuticle extracts comigrate. One-dimensional "fingerprints" indicate that cuticle proteins from these two stages have unique primary structures. Immunological results indicate that the major low molecular weight larval and pupal cuticle proteins are comprised of two families of proteins that share antigenic determinants. The high molecular weight pupal cuticle proteins are immunologically unrelated to the low molecular weight components. We conclude that the pupal and larval proteins are encoded in part by multigene families that have arisen by gene duplication and evolutionary divergence.  相似文献   

5.
The cuticle proteins of Drosophila melanogaster: stage specificity   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Five stage-specific cuticles are produced during the development of Drosophila. Urea-soluble proteins were extracted from each developmental stage and compared by gel electrophoresis. Proteins from first and second instar cuticle are identical except for minor differences in two proteins. Each subsequent stage, third instar, pupa, and adult, has a unique set of cuticle proteins. Qualitative changes within stages are seen in proteins from third instar and adult cuticle. Third instar cuticle proteins can be divided into “early” [proteins 2a, 3, 4, 5, 7, and 8] and “late” [proteins 2 and 1] groups. Adult cuticle proteins change in relative amounts during pharate adult development and change mobility at eclosion. The lower abdominal pupal cuticle lacks a protein found in the pupal cuticle covering the head and thorax. Cuticle proteins from each stage are immunologically related. Nonetheless, electrophoretic variants of three larval proteins do not affect any major changes in the electrophoretic mobility of proteins from other stages. We propose that each stage (except first and second instar) has proteins encoded by discrete genes.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Butterfly wing color-patterns are determined in the prospective wing tissues during the late larval and early pupal stages. To study the cellular differentiation process of wings, morphological knowledge on pupal wings is prerequisite. Here we systematically examined morphological patterns of the pupal wing cuticular surface in a wide variety of nymphalid butterflies in relation to adult color-patterns. Several kinds of pupal wing patterns corresponding to particular adult color-pattern elements were widely observed in many species. Especially noteworthy were the pupal "focal" spots corresponding to the adult border ocelli system, which were detected in many species of Nymphalinae, Apaturinae, Argynninae, Satyrinae, and Danainae. Striped patterns on the pupal wing cuticle seen in some species of Limenitinae, Ariadnae, and Marpesiinae directly corresponded to those of the adult wings. In Vanessa cardui, eyespot-like pattern elements were tentatively produced during development in the wing tissue underneath the pupal spots and subsequently erased, suggesting a mechanism for producing novel color-patterns in the course of development and evolution. The pupal focal spots reasonably correlated with the adult eyespots in size in Precis orithya and Ypthima argus. We physically damaged the pupal focal spots and their corresponding cells underneath in these species, which abolished or inhibited the formation of the adult eyespots. Taken together, our results clarified that pupal cuticle patterns were often indicative of the adult color-patterns and apparently reflect molecular activity of organizing centers for the adult color-pattern formation at least in nymphalid butterflies.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Abstract. . Morphological colour adaptation of pupae of the butterfly Inachis io L. (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) is controlled by a factor which reduces cuticular melanization (Biickmann & Maisch, 1987). This so-called pupal melanization reducing factor (PMRF) is located throughout the entire central nervous system of prepupae (Stamecker et al. , 1994).
Extracts of abdominal ganglia also stimulated dose-dependently lutein incorporation into pupal cuticle. In the bioassay higher doses were required to increase cuticular lutein content than to reduce melanization. Ligatures during the prepupal stage demonstrated two different critical periods for these pigmentation effects: an early one for melanization reduction and a late one for lutein incorporation.
An initial chromatographic purification yielded only two adjacent fractions which contained both the PMRF and the stimulation of lutein incorporation activity. Therefore it is assumed that only one hormone with a dual function may be responsible for pupal pigmentation.
Lutein content was found in gut, fat body, epidermis and haemolymph of I.io. Lutein incorporation into cuticle occurred within 1.5 days of the pupal moult when the cuticle was not yet fully sclerotized. Lutein content is significantly higher in cuticle of yellow pupae than of black ones.  相似文献   

10.
Differentiating imaginal hypodermal cells of Drosophila melanogaster form adult cuticle during the second half of the pupal stage (about 40 to 93 hr postpupariation). A group of proteins with molecular weights of 23,000, 20,000, and 14,000 is identified as putative major wing cuticle proteins with the following biological properties: These proteins are abundant components of cuticle and are major synthetic products of cuticle-secreting hypodermal cells. They are leucine-rich and methionine-free and are the most prominent proteins of this type synthesized by wing hypoderm at 65 hr, during the period of procuticle formation. Electron microscopic autoradiography shows that leucine-rich, methionine-free proteins specifically localize to the apical cell surface and newly secreted cuticle of 65-hr wing cells. This strongly suggests the export of these proteins to the cuticle. Lastly, these proteins undergo a reduction in extractability just after eclosion, during the period of cuticle protein crosslinking (sclerotization). The synthesis of these major hypoderm proteins is temporally regulated in development. In wing cells, the 14-kDa proteins are synthesized first, from 53 to 78 hr, and the 20- and 23-kDa proteins are synthesized from 63 to 93 hr. The pattern of synthesis for these proteins is similar in abdominal cells but delayed by 6 to 10 hr. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis shows that each of the 23-, 20-, and 14-kDa size classes contains at least two component polypeptides. Patterns of protein synthesis in cells of the imaginal hypodermis are regulated in a precise temporal sequence during the production of adult cuticle. Their study yields a useful system for the analysis of molecular events in gene control and cell differentiation.  相似文献   

11.
Correct patterning of cells within an epithelium is key to establishing their normal function. However, the precise mechanisms by which individual cells arrive at their final developmental niche remains poorly understood. We developed an optimized system for imaging the developing Drosophila retina, an ideal tissue for the study of cell positioning. Using this technique, we characterized the cellular dynamics of developing wild-type pupal retinas. We also analyzed two mutants affecting eye patterning and demonstrate that cells mutant for Notch or Roughest signaling were aberrantly dynamic in their cell movements. Finally, we establish a role for the adherens junction regulator P120-Catenin in retinal patterning through its regulation of normal adherens junction integrity. Our results indicate a requirement for P120-Catenin in the developing retina, the first reported developmental function of this protein in the epithelia of lower metazoa. Based upon our live visualization of the P120-Catenin mutant as well as genetic data, we conclude that P120-Catenin is acting to stabilize E-cadherin and adherens junction integrity during eye development.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The emergence of order in the Drosophila pupal retina   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
During pupation, long-range order is imposed on the autonomously developing ommatidia which compose the Drosophila eye. To accomplish this, eight additional cell types arise: the primary, secondary, and tertiary pigment cells, and the four cells that form the bristle. These cells form an interweaving lattice between ommatidia. The lattice is refined when excess cells are removed to bring neighboring ommatidia into register. Recent evidence suggests that in larval development, local contacts direct cell fate. The same appears to be true during pupal development: the contacts a cell makes predict the cell type it will become. Cells which contact the anterior or posterior cone cells in an ommatidium invariably become primary pigment cells. Cells which contact primary pigment cells from different ommatidia become secondary and tertiary pigment cells. Bristle development is in several ways distinct from ommatidial development. The four cells of each bristle group appear to be immediate descendents of a single founder cell. During their early differentiation, they do not make stereotyped contacts with surrounding ommatidial cells, but do make particular contacts within the bristle group. And unlike the surrounding ommatidia, differentiation of the bristles radiates from the center of the eye to the edges. As cells are removed during two stages of programmed cell death, the bristles are brought into their final position. When all cells in the lattice have achieved their final position, a second stage of retinal development begins as structures specific to each cell type are produced. This paper follows these various stages of pupal development, and suggests how local cell-cell contacts may produce the cells needed for a functional retina.  相似文献   

14.
15.
《Insect Biochemistry》1987,17(6):919-927
The incorporation of [1-3H]d-glucosamine in Drosophila melanogaster imaginal discs revealed the synthesis of glycoproteins represented by a family of subfractions with roughly the same molecular mass of about 80,000 and discrete isoelectric point values in the range of 5.0 to 6.5 pH units. The incorporation of [1-3H]d-glucosamine was not inhibited by tunicamycin, an inhibitor of N-glycosylation. This family of glycoproteins is relatively protease-resistant but can be digested by high concentrations of pronase E (100 μg/ml) or pepsin (1 mg/ml). The carbohydrate component of these glycoproteins is sensitive to chitinase. The properties of the glycoproteins in imaginal discs are similar to those of chitinase sensitive glycoproteins found in established cell cultures of D. melanogaster [Kramerov et al., Insect Biochem. 16, 417–432 (1986)]. Incorporation of [1-3H]d-glucosamine into the family of glycoproteins decreases as the imaginal discs undergo evagination induced by 20-hydroxyecdysone.  相似文献   

16.
Injections of [14C] glucose and [3H] dopamine have shown the existence of a phenolic conjugate in pharate and tanning pupae. The function and structure of this conjugate is unknown; however, tracer studies have shown it to be ionically associated with a small peptide. Reinjection of this double-labelled peptide results in the transfer of the phenol, but not the label from the glucose to a large protein complex where it is tightly bound. Subsequent tracing of the phenolic-labelled protein complex demonstrated that it crossed the epidermis and became incorporated into the cuticle.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The regulation of NaCl is essential for the maintenance of cellular tonicity and functionality, and excessive salt exposure has many adverse effects. The fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, is a good osmoregulator and some strains can survive on media with very low or high NaCl content. Previous analyses of mutant alleles have implicated various stress signaling cascades in NaCl sensitivity or tolerance; however, the genes influencing natural variability of NaCl tolerance remain for the most part unknown. Here, we use two approaches to investigate natural variation in D. melanogaster NaCl tolerance. We describe four D. melanogaster lines that were selected for different degrees of NaCl tolerance, and present data on their survival, development, and pupation position when raised on varying NaCl concentrations. After finding evidence for natural variation in salt tolerance, we present the results of Quantitative Trait Loci (QTL) mapping of natural variation in larval and pupal NaCl tolerance, and identify different genomic regions associated with NaCl tolerance during larval and pupal development.  相似文献   

19.
In the early Drosophila embryo, BMP-type ligands act as morphogens to suppress neural induction and to specify the formation of dorsal ectoderm and amnioserosa. Likewise, during pupal wing development, BMPs help to specify vein versus intervein cell fate. Here, we review recent data suggesting that these two processes use a related set of extracellular factors, positive feedback, and BMP heterodimer formation to achieve peak levels of signaling in spatially restricted patterns. Because these signaling pathway components are all conserved, these observations should shed light on how BMP signaling is modulated in vertebrate development.  相似文献   

20.
The cuticular exoskeleton of arthropods is a composite material comprising well-separated layers that differ in function and molecular constituents. Epidermal cells secrete these layers sequentially, synthesizing components of distal cuticle layers before proximal ones. Could the order of synthesis and secretion be sufficient to account for the precision with which cuticle components localize to specific layers? We addressed this question by studying the spatial restriction of melanization in the Drosophila wing. Melanin formation is confined to a narrow layer within the distal procuticle. Surprisingly, this tight localization depends on the multi-ligand endocytic receptor Megalin (Mgl). Mgl acts, in part, by promoting endocytic clearance of Yellow. Yellow is required for black melanin formation, and its synthesis begins as cuticle is secreted. Near the end of cuticle secretion, its levels drop precipitously by a mechanism that depends on Mgl and Rab5-dependent endocytosis. In the absence of Mgl, Yellow protein persists at higher levels and melanin granules form ectopically in more proximal layers of the procuticle. We propose that the tight localization of the melanin synthesis machinery to the distal procuticle depends not only on the timing of its synthesis and secretion, but also on the rapid clearance of these components before synthesis of subsequent cuticle layers.  相似文献   

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