71 research outputs found
Genetic dissection of meiotic cytokinesis in Drosphila males
mutants defective in meiotic cytokinesis can be easily identified by their multinucleate spermatids. Moreover, the large
size of meiotic spindles allows characterization of mutant phenotypes with exquisite cytological resolution. We have
screened a collection of 1955 homozygous mutant male sterile lines for those with multinucleate spermatids, and thereby
identified mutations in 19 genes required for cytokinesis. These include 16 novel loci and three genes, diaphanous, four
wheel drive, and pebble, already known to be involved in Drosophila cytokinesis. To define the primary defects leading
to failure of cytokinesis, we analyzed meiotic divisions in male mutants for each of these 19 genes. Examination of
preparations stained for tubulin, anillin, KLP3A, and F-actin revealed discrete defects in the components of the cytokinetic
apparatus, suggesting that these genes act at four major points in a stepwise pathway for cytokinesis. Our results also
indicated that the central spindle and the contractile ring are interdependent structures that interact throughout cytokinesis.
Moreover, our genetic and cytological analyses provide further evidence for a cell type-specific control of Drosophila
cytokinesis, suggesting that several genes required for meiotic cytokinesis in males are not required for mitotic
cytokinesis
Tip cell-derived RTK signaling initiates cell movements in the Drosophila stomatogastric nervous system anlage
The stomatogastric nervous system (SNS) of Drosophila is a simply organized neural circuitry that innervates the anterior enteric system. Unlike the central and the peripheral nervous systems, the SNS derives from a compact epithelial anlage in which three invagination centers, each giving rise to an invagination fold headed by a tip cell, are generated. Tip cell selection involves lateral inhibition, a process in which Wingless (Wg) activity adjusts the range of Notch signaling. Here we show that RTK signaling mediated by the Drosophila homolog of the epidermal growth factor receptor, DER, plays a key role in two consecutive steps during early SNS development. Like Wg, DER signaling participates in adjusting the range of Notch-dependent lateral inhibition during tip cell selection. Subsequently, tip cells secrete the DER ligand Spitz and trigger local RTK signaling, which initiates morphogenetic movements resulting in the tip cell-directed invaginations within the SNS anlage
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