Literature DB >> 28305249

Extra tarsal joints and abnormal cuticular polarities in various mutants ofDrosophila melanogaster.

Lewis Irving Held1, Christine Marie Duarte1, Kourosh Derakhshanian1.   

Abstract

The legs of flies from 16 different mutant strains ofDrosophila melanogaster were examined for abnormal cuticular polarities and extra joints. The strains were chosen for study because they manifest abnormal cuticular polarities in some parts of the body (10 strains) or because they have missing or defective tarsal joints (6 strains). All but three of the stocks were found to exhibit misorientations of either the bristles, hairs, or "bract-socket vectors" on the legs. The latter term denotes an imaginary vector pointing from a hairlike structure called a "bract" to the bristle socket with which it is associated. On the legs of wild-type flies nearly all such vectors point distally, as do the bristles and hairs. In the mutant flies, the most common vector misorientation is a 180° reversal. When the bract-socket vectors of adjacent bristle sites in the same bristle row point toward one another, the distance between the sites is frequently abnormally large, whereas when the vectors point in opposite directions, the interval is frequently abnormally small. This correlation is interpreted to mean that bristle cells actively repel one another via cytoplasmic extensions that are longer in the direction of the bract-socket vector than in the opposite direction. Repulsive forces of this kind may be responsible for "fine-tuning" the regularity of bristle spacing in wild-type flies.Extra tarsal joints were found in eight of the 16 strains. A ninth strain completely lacking tarsal joints appears in some cases to have an extra tibia-basitarsus joint in its tibia. Whereas the tarsi of wild-type flies contain four joints, the tarsi ofspiny legs mutant flies contain as many as eight joints. In this extreme extra-joint phenotype, four of the joints correspond to the normal wild-type joints, and there is an extra joint in every tarsal segment except the distal-most (fifth) segment. Nearly all such ectopic extra joints have inverted polarity. In other strains the extra tarsal joints are located mainly at the wild-type joint sites, and joints of this sort have wild-type polarity. The alternation of normal and inverted (extra) joints inspiny legs resembles the alternation of normal and inverted (extra) body segment boundaries in the embryonic-lethal mutantpatch, suggesting that tarsal and body segmentation may share a common patterning mechanism.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bristle; Cell polarity; Drosophila; Limb development; Pattern formation

Year:  1986        PMID: 28305249     DOI: 10.1007/BF02439432

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rouxs Arch Dev Biol        ISSN: 0930-035X


  27 in total

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Authors:  V French; P J Bryant; S V Bryant
Journal:  Science       Date:  1976-09-10       Impact factor: 47.728

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Authors:  Clifton A Poodry; Howard A Schneiderman
Journal:  Wilehm Roux Arch Dev Biol       Date:  1976-09

3.  Pattern stability in the insect segment : I. Pattern reconstitution by intercalary regeneration and cell sorting inDysdercus intermedius Dist.

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4.  The role of the peripodial membrane in the morphogenesis of the eye-antennal disc ofDrosophila melanogaster.

Authors:  Martin John Milner; Alison Jane Bleasby; Andrew Pyott
Journal:  Wilehm Roux Arch Dev Biol       Date:  1983-05

5.  A study of the differentiation of bracts in Drosophila melanogaster using two mutations, H 2 and sv de .

Authors:  H Tobler; V Rothenbühler; R Nöthiger
Journal:  Experientia       Date:  1973-03-15

6.  Determination of bristle direction in Drosophila.

Authors:  C Tokunaga; C Stern
Journal:  Dev Biol       Date:  1969-11       Impact factor: 3.582

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Authors:  P J Bryant; H A Schneiderman
Journal:  Dev Biol       Date:  1969-09       Impact factor: 3.582

8.  Detailed neurite morphologies of sister neurolbastoma cells are related.

Authors:  F Solomon
Journal:  Cell       Date:  1979-01       Impact factor: 41.582

9.  A genetic analysis of the determination of cuticular polarity during development in Drosophila melanogaster.

Authors:  D Gubb; A García-Bellido
Journal:  J Embryol Exp Morphol       Date:  1982-04

10.  Development and determination of hairs and bristles in the milkweed bug, Oncopeltus fasciatus (Lygaeidae, Hemiptera).

Authors:  P A Lawrence
Journal:  J Cell Sci       Date:  1966-12       Impact factor: 5.285

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Journal:  Rouxs Arch Dev Biol       Date:  1990-07

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Authors:  Lewis I Held
Journal:  Rouxs Arch Dev Biol       Date:  1990-07

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Authors:  Stephen Kerridge; Michèle Thomas-Cavallin
Journal:  Rouxs Arch Dev Biol       Date:  1988-01

7.  Interactions of decapentaplegic, wingless, and Distal-less in the Drosophila leg.

Authors:  Lewis I Held; Michael A Heup; J Mark Sappington; Scott D Peters
Journal:  Rouxs Arch Dev Biol       Date:  1994-05

8.  Selective function of the PDZ domain of Dishevelled in noncanonical Wnt signalling.

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Review 9.  Wingless Signaling: A Genetic Journey from Morphogenesis to Metastasis.

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10.  Planar cell polarity controls directional Notch signaling in the Drosophila leg.

Authors:  Amalia Capilla; Ruth Johnson; Maki Daniels; María Benavente; Sarah J Bray; Máximo Ibo Galindo
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  10 in total

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