Compartments in the wing of Drosophila: A study of the engrailed gene |
| |
Authors: | P A Lawrence G Morata |
| |
Institution: | MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Hills Road, Cambridge, CB2 2QH, England |
| |
Abstract: | It has recently been suggested that the wildtype alleles of homeotic genes are responsible for controlling the development of compartments. Because the mutation engrailed gives the posterior wing compartment anterior characteristics, it can be regarded as such a homeotic gene. Our experiments confirm the role of the engrailed gene in development of the posterior wing compartment, results which strongly support and extend the compartment hypothesis.Clonal analysis reveals that the state of the engrailed gene is immaterial to the entire anterior compartment, and crucial to the normal development of the posterior compartment, where it controls the pattern of veins and bristles. The presence of a straight and precisely positioned compartment border is dependent on the activity of the engrailed gene until late in development. We suggest that this is due to the gene's effects on cell affinities of the posterior compartment.The engrailed mutation increases the size and changes the shape of the posterior compartment. engrailed clones cause local wing enlargement only if they are dorsal and include the posterior margin of the wing. Wildtype cells outside the clone contribute to this change of shape. This result suggests that the postero-dorsal margin is primarily responsible for the control of shape, and that the ventral compartment is, to some extent, modeled on the dorsal. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|