The iroquois complex controls the somatotopy of Drosophila notum mechanosensory projections
Sensory neurons can establish topologically ordered projections in the central nervous system, thereby building an internal representation of the external world. We analyze how this ordering is genetically controlled in Drosophila, using as a model system the neurons that innervate the mechanosensor...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Development (Cambridge) 1998-09, Vol.125 (18), p.3563-3569 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Sensory neurons can establish topologically ordered projections in the central nervous system, thereby building an internal representation of the external world. We analyze how this ordering is genetically controlled in Drosophila, using as a model system the neurons that innervate the mechanosensory bristles on the back of the fly (the notum). Sensory neurons innervating the medially located bristles send an axonal branch that crosses the central nervous system midline, defining a âmedialâ identity, while the ones that innervate the lateral bristles send no such branch, defining a âlateralâ identity. We analyze the role of the proneural genes achaete and scute, which are involved in the formation of the medial and lateral bristles, and we show that they have no effect on the âmedialâ and âlateralâ identities of the neurons. We also analyze the role of the prepattern genes araucan and caupolican, two members of the iroquois gene complex which are required for the expression of achaete and scute in the lateral region of the notum, and we show that their expression is responsible for the âlateralâ identity of the projection. |
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ISSN: | 0950-1991 1477-9129 |