Juxtaposition between two cell types is necessary for dorsal appendage tube formation
The Drosophila egg chamber provides an excellent model for studying the link between patterning and morphogenesis. Late in oogenesis, a portion of the flat follicular epithelium remodels to form two tubes; secretion of eggshell proteins into the tube lumens creates the dorsal appendages. Two distinc...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Mechanisms of development 2005-02, Vol.122 (2), p.241-255 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Drosophila egg chamber provides an excellent model for studying the link between patterning and morphogenesis. Late in oogenesis, a portion of the flat follicular epithelium remodels to form two tubes; secretion of eggshell proteins into the tube lumens creates the dorsal appendages. Two distinct cell types contribute to dorsal appendage formation: cells expressing the
rhomboid-lacZ (
rho-lacZ) marker form the ventral floor of the tube and cells expressing high levels of the transcription factor Broad form a roof over the
rho-lacZ cells. In mutants that produce defective dorsal appendages (
K10,
Ras and ectopic
decapentaplegic) both cell types are specified and reorganize to occupy their stereotypical locations within the otherwise defective tubes. Although the
rho-lacZ and Broad cells rearrange to form a tube in wild type and mutant egg chambers, they never intermingle, suggesting that a boundary exists that prevents mixing between these two cell types. Consistent with this hypothesis, the Broad and
rho-lacZ cells express different levels of the homophilic adhesion molecule Fasciclin 3. Furthermore, in the anterior of the egg, ectopic
rhomboid is sufficient to induce both cell types, which reorganize appropriately to form an ectopic tube. We propose that signaling across a boundary separating the
rho-lacZ and Broad cells choreographs the cell shape-changes and rearrangements necessary to transform an initially flat epithelium into a tube. |
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ISSN: | 0925-4773 1872-6356 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.mod.2004.10.006 |