Transcriptional control of glial and blood cell development in Drosophila: cis-regulatory elements of glial cells missing
In Drosophila, glial cell differentiation requires the expression of glial cells missing ( gcm) in multiple neural cell lineages, where gcm acts as a binary switch for glial vs. neuronal fate. Thus, the primary event controlling gliogenesis in neural progenitors is the transcription of gcm. In addit...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Developmental biology 2004-02, Vol.266 (2), p.374-387 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In
Drosophila, glial cell differentiation requires the expression of
glial cells missing (
gcm) in multiple neural cell lineages, where
gcm acts as a binary switch for glial vs. neuronal fate. Thus, the primary event controlling gliogenesis in neural progenitors is the transcription of
gcm. In addition,
gcm is also required for the differentiation of macrophages, and is expressed in the hemocyte lineage. This dual role of
gcm in glial cell and blood cell development underscores the need for the precise temporal and spatial regulation of
gcm transcription. To understand how
gcm transcription is regulated, we have undertaken an analysis of the
cis-regulatory DNA elements of
gcm using
lacZ reporter activity in transgenic embryos, testing the activity of approximately 35 kilobases of DNA from the
gcm locus. We have identified several distinct DNA regions that promote most of the elements of
gcm expression. These include elements for general neural expression,
gcm-independent and
gcm-dependent glial-specific expression, as well as early and late hemocyte expression. We show that expression of an abdominal glial-specific element is dependent on the homeotic gene
abdominal-A. Our results indicate that
gcm transcription is controlled by a combination of general and lineage-specific elements, positive autoregulation, and neuronal repression. |
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ISSN: | 0012-1606 1095-564X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ydbio.2003.10.013 |