Helper sites and the C-clamp are not required for basal repression of Wg targets in <i>Drosophila</i>.
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Abstract
<p>(A–I) Confocal images of stage 16–17 embryos containing a <i>pxb::lacZ</i> WRE reporter immunostained for Wg (green) (A, D & G), lacZ (red) (B, E & H) or merged (C, F & I). The wild-type reporter shows a pattern overlapping with Wg in the second constriction of the midgut, and a non-overlapping pattern in the hindgut (A–C). Mutation of two HMG sites leads to a strong depression through the entire midgut (arrowheads), without affecting lacZ expression in the second constriction (arrow) (D–F). Mutation of two Helper sites leads to a significant decrease in the lacZ expression in the second constriction (arrow) with weak ectopic expression (arrowheads)(G–I). The hindgut expression did not vary in the different constructs and was used as an internal control. All images are representative of at least 20 embryos. (J–M) Images of adult wings containing the wing driver <i>C96-Gal4</i> crossed to wildtype (WT) (J, J′), UAS-TCF/Pan RNAi (K, K′) or UAS-TCF/Pan RNAi plus UAS-LEF1 (L, L′) or UAS-LEF1 plus the C-clamp of TCF/Pan (M, M′). Knockdown of TCF/Pan leads to notches (arrowheads) and ectopic wing margin bristles (block arrows) along the periphery of the wing (where <i>C96-Gal4</i> is active; K, K′). Expression of the human LEF1 transgene significantly rescues the ectopic bristle expression, but not the notches (L, L′). Expression of a LEF1-C-clamp chimera rescues the wing margin defects and prevents ectopic bristle formation, and causes a L5 vein defect (arrow). Details about the penetrance of these phenotypes are listed in <a href="http://www.plosgenetics.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004133#pgen-1004133-t001" target="_blank">Table 1</a>.</p