Literature DB >> 15081356

The Tribolium homologue of glass and the evolution of insect larval eyes.

Zhenyi Liu1, Markus Friedrich.   

Abstract

While non-arthropod orthologues have been found for many Drosophila eye developmental genes, this has not been the case for the glass (gl) gene, which encodes a zinc finger transcription factor required for photoreceptor cell specification, differentiation, and survival. This study reports sequence and expression analysis of the gl orthologue of the flour beetle Tribolium castaneum. A strongly conserved C-terminal zinc finger binding region and a moderately conserved N-terminal transcriptional activation domain characterize the putative Tribolium gl protein. Tribolium gl transcripts were detected in the developing photoreceptors of the larval and adult visual system, the corpora cardiaca, and subsets of cells in the developing brain. This suggests that the gl function of specifying predominantly neuronal cells is strongly conserved. Using gl as a marker for the onset of larval photoreceptor differentiation, we studied the embryonic development of the Tribolium visual system. We find that the Tribolium larval eyes originate at the posterior margin of the embryonic eye lobes as defined by eye-field-specific wingless expression domains. This is consistent with the hypothesis that the larval visual organs (stemmata) of holometabolous insects were derived from and are therefore homologous to the posterior-most ommatidia of the adult retina in primitive nonholometabolous insects.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15081356     DOI: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2004.01.012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Biol        ISSN: 0012-1606            Impact factor:   3.582


  16 in total

1.  The visual system of male scale insects.

Authors:  Elke K Buschbeck; Martin Hauser
Journal:  Naturwissenschaften       Date:  2008-12-04

2.  Spatial distribution of opsin-encoding mRNAs in the tiered larval retinas of the sunburst diving beetle Thermonectus marmoratus (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae).

Authors:  Srdjan Maksimovic; Tiffany A Cook; Elke K Buschbeck
Journal:  J Exp Biol       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 3.312

3.  Two temporal functions of Glass: Ommatidium patterning and photoreceptor differentiation.

Authors:  Xulong Liang; Simpla Mahato; Chris Hemmerich; Andrew C Zelhof
Journal:  Dev Biol       Date:  2016-04-19       Impact factor: 3.582

4.  Serial electron microscopic reconstruction of the drosophila larval eye: Photoreceptors with a rudimentary rhabdomere of microvillar-like processes.

Authors:  Volker Hartenstein; Michaela Yuan; Amelia Younossi-Hartenstein; Aanavi Karandikar; F Javier Bernardo-Garcia; Simon Sprecher; Elisabeth Knust
Journal:  Dev Biol       Date:  2019-05-31       Impact factor: 3.582

Review 5.  Evolution and development of complex eyes: a celebration of diversity.

Authors:  Kristen M Koenig; Jeffrey M Gross
Journal:  Development       Date:  2020-10-13       Impact factor: 6.868

6.  The Macrostomum lignano EST database as a molecular resource for studying platyhelminth development and phylogeny.

Authors:  Joshua Morris; Peter Ladurner; Reinhard Rieger; Daniela Pfister; Maria Del Mar De Miguel-Bonet; David Jacobs; Volker Hartenstein
Journal:  Dev Genes Evol       Date:  2006-10-05       Impact factor: 0.900

Review 7.  The evolutionary diversity of insect retinal mosaics: common design principles and emerging molecular logic.

Authors:  Mathias F Wernet; Michael W Perry; Claude Desplan
Journal:  Trends Genet       Date:  2015-05-26       Impact factor: 11.639

8.  Gene duplication and the origins of morphological complexity in pancrustacean eyes, a genomic approach.

Authors:  Ajna S Rivera; M Sabrina Pankey; David C Plachetzki; Carlos Villacorta; Anna E Syme; Jeanne M Serb; Angela R Omilian; Todd H Oakley
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2010-04-30       Impact factor: 3.260

9.  A Complex Lens for a Complex Eye.

Authors:  Aaron L Stahl; Regina S Baucom; Tiffany A Cook; Elke K Buschbeck
Journal:  Integr Comp Biol       Date:  2017-11-01       Impact factor: 3.326

10.  The Pax gene eyegone facilitates repression of eye development in Tribolium.

Authors:  Nazanin ZarinKamar; Xiaoyun Yang; Riyue Bao; Frank Friedrich; Rolf Beutel; Markus Friedrich
Journal:  Evodevo       Date:  2011-04-04       Impact factor: 2.250

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