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Drosophila Lyra Mutations Are Gain-of-Function Mutations of senseless
Riitta Nolo1,a, Lois A. Abbott1,c, and Hugo J. Bellena,ba Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Program in Developmental Biology, Division of Neuroscience, Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030
b Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, Program in Developmental Biology, Division of Neuroscience, Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030
c Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology Department, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309
Corresponding author: Hugo J. Bellen, Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, Rm. T634, MS BCM235, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030., hbellen{at}bcm.tmc.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: T. C. KAUFMAN
| ABSTRACT |
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The Lyra mutation was first described by Jerry Coyne in 1935. Lyra causes recessive pupal lethality and adult heterozygous Lyra mutants exhibit a dominant loss of the anterior and posterior wing margins. Unlike many mutations that cause loss of wing tissue (e.g., scalloped, Beadex, cut, and apterous-Xasta), Lyra wing discs do not exhibit increased necrotic or apoptotic cell death, nor do they show altered BrdU incorporation. However, during wing disc eversion, loss of the anterior and posterior wing margins is apparent. We have previously shown that senseless, a gene that is necessary and sufficient for peripheral nervous system (PNS) development, is allelic to Lyra. Here we show by several genetic criteria that Lyra alleles are neomorphic alleles of senseless that cause ectopic expression of SENSELESS in the wing pouch. Similarly, overexpression of SENSELESS in the wing disc causes loss of wing margin tissue, thereby mimicking the Lyra phenotype. Lyra mutants display aberrant expression of DELTA, VESTIGIAL, WINGLESS, and CUT. As in Lyra mutants, overexpression of SENSELESS in some areas of the wing pouch also leads to loss of WINGLESS and CUT. In summary, our data indicate that overexpression of SENSELESS causes a severe reduction in NOTCH signaling that in turn may lead to decreased transcription of several key genes required for wing development, leading to a failure in cell proliferation and loss of wing margin tissue.
LIKE Lyra, many mutations that affect wing morphogenesis have mutant phenotypes in which there are missing sectors of the wing margins. These include vestigial, Notch, Delta, cut, apterous, and others (![]()
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The Lyra1 mutation is associated with an X-ray-induced deletion uncovering cytological bands 70A2-3;A5-6 (![]()
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Properties of the Lyra1 phenotype were studied extensively by ![]()
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Here we show that Lyra mutations correspond to neomorphic/gain-of-function mutations of senseless. The senseless gene plays a key role in peripheral nervous system (PNS) development. Its loss causes a severe loss of external peripheral sensory organs in embryos, and its overexpression causes the formation of extra PNS organs (![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Drosophila stocks:
The wild-type stock was Canton-S (Bloomington Stock Center). The other stocks used in this work are as follows:
- yw; P[lacZ, w+]64A sensM256 th st cu sr es ca/TM6, Hu P[w+, abdA-lacZ] e Tb ca (
SALZBERG et al. 1994 )
- yw; P[lacZ, w+]64A sensI235 th st cu sr es ca/TM6, Hu P[w+, abdA-lacZ] eTb ca (
SALZBERG et al. 1994 )
- yw; Df(3L)1228/4 P[lacZ, w+]/TM3, Ser Sb (
SALZBERG et al. 1997 )
- Ly1/TM3, Sb (
ABBOTT 1986 )
- LyraSx67/TM3, Sb (P. Heizler, Strasbourg, France)
- P{hsneo}l(3)neo19 (
SPRADLING et al. 1999 )
- Delta130P{ry[+]=lArB}A77.1M3/TM3, Sb ry
- sensE1 red e/TM3, Sb e (H. Irick, Bloomington, IN)
- sensE2 red e/TM3, Sb e (H. Irick)
- sensE53 red e/TM3, Sb e (H. Irick)
- sensE54 red e/TM3, Sb e (H. Irick)
- sensE58 red e/TM3, Sb e (H. Irick)
- sensE69 red e/TM3, Sb e (H. Irick)
- vgBE-lacZ and vgQE-lacZ (S. Carroll, Madison, WI)
The GAL4- drivers used were C96-GAL4 (R. Bodmer, Ann Arbor, MI), C1003-GAL4 (J. Lopez, New York), and dpp-GAL4/TM6B (G. Mardon, Houston) with UAS-lacZ and UAS-sens (C5, C6) (![]()
Immunohistochemistry and antibody staining:
X-Gal staining was performed as described (![]()
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In situ hybridization:
string cDNA (a gift from B. Edgar) was used as a template for digoxigenin-labeled RNA probes (RNA labeling kit; Roche, Indianapolis).
| RESULTS |
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Lyra alleles are gain-of-function alleles of senseless:
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As shown in Table 1, complementation tests for the lethal phenotype showed that six of these mutations are alleles of senseless referred to as complementation group l(3)70Ad in FlyBase. This complementation group is presumably allelic to one of the lost l(3)70A complementation groups described by ![]()
The Lyra1 deficiency in trans to other senseless alleles causes lethality but these mutant embryos do not display a severe loss of neurons as typically seen in homozygous senseless mutations (![]()
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The following data support the neomorphic nature of the Lyra mutations, that is, that they are gain-of-function, regulatory mutations of senseless. First, the dominant phenotype associated with Lyra1 could not be recombined onto a senseless mutant chromosome, indicating that both mutations map at the same site and that the Lyra phenotype may be breakpoint dependent. Second, molecular analyses show that the distal breakpoint of Df(3L)Ly1 affects a genomic fragment that contains the 3' end, including the 3' untranslated region, of the sens gene (data not shown). Third, an X-ray-induced revertant of LyraSX67, LyraSX67R12, is homozygous lethal and fails to complement all the senseless alleles, showing that LyraSX67 is associated with senseless. Fourth, both Lyra mutations cause ectopic expression of SENSELESS in wing imaginal discs (see below). These observations strongly indicate that the Lyra alleles are neomorphic/gain-of-function mutations of senseless.
The complementation data, combined with data from anti-SENSELESS-stained embryos, and the analysis of the severity of the phenotypes in which there is loss of PNS neurons in embryos support the allelic series that is shown in Table 2. We propose to keep the name senseless, which refers to the loss of PNS organs, and to refer to Lyra alleles of senseless as neomorphic/gain-of-function alleles that affect the wing margin.
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SENSELESS is ectopically expressed in the wing pouch of Lyra mutants:
We have previously shown that senseless is expressed in the sensory organ precursors (SOPs) of the embryonic and adult PNS (![]()
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Ectopic expression of SENSELESS causes loss of wing margin:
To demonstrate that ectopic expression of SENSELESS can mimic the Lyra phenotype, we constructed flies that carried different UAS-senseless transgenes under the control of GAL4 drivers that express GAL4 rather specifically in the wing disc. Most and possibly all GAL4 drivers that cause widespread expression of GAL4 are lethal in the presence of UAS-senseless. As shown in Fig 2A and Fig B, ectopic expression of SENSELESS in the wing disc using the C1003-GAL4 driver causes a phenotype that is similar to that observed in Lyra mutants in that the wing margins are severely affected whereas the rest of the wing is unaffected. As shown in Fig 2C and Fig D, expression of SENSELESS in a domain that corresponds to the wing margin using the C96-GAL4 driver (![]()
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Lyra mutations cause loss of DELTA, VESTIGIAL, WINGLESS, and CUT expression:
To determine the effects of Lyra mutations on the expression of key genes that have been shown to play important roles in wing development we tested four markers. The vestigial gene can be viewed as the wing selector gene as its lack of expression causes wing loss and its ectopic expression causes extra wing tissue (![]()
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We tested the effect of both Lyra mutants on the expression pattern of lacZ driven by the vestigial boundary enhancer vgBE (![]()
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In addition to vestigial, wingless has also been shown to play an essential role in wing development (![]()
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Given the similarities between the loss of wing margin tissue in some cut and Lyra mutants (![]()
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Since NOTCH signaling plays a prominent role in the regulation of the expression of vgBE, wingless, and cut (![]()
Ectopic expression of SENSELESS affects WINGLESS and CUT expression:
To further investigate the ability of SENSELESS to downregulate the expression of specific genes, we tested the effect of ectopic expression of SENSELESS on WINGLESS and CUT expression. Ectopic expression of SENSELESS using the C96-GAL4 wing margin driver and staining with anti-SENSELESS is shown in Fig 4A. SENSELESS overexpression causes a dramatic downregulation of WINGLESS (Fig 4B) and CUT protein levels (Fig 4C), although in both cases clusters of immunoreactive cells along the wing margin remain. Similarly, when using the dpp-GAL4 driver to ectopically express SENSELESS along the anterior-posterior wing boundary (Fig 4D) we find a precise disruption in the continuity of WINGLESS (Fig 4E) and CUT (Fig 4F) expression where the dpp stripe is normally expressed. This downregulation correlates with a loss of the distal tip of the wing (data not shown). Note also that ectopic SENSELESS expression causes ectopic CUT expression in some cells of the wing pouch that normally do not express CUT, as expected from previous observations (![]()
|
Margin loss in Lyra mutants:
The loss of wing margin in Lyra mutants can be viewed as the sum of two components. The first component is an effect on margin determination in the developing wing disc. Indeed, our data are in agreement with numerous observations showing that loss of NOTCH signaling causes loss of expression in the wing margin of the patterning genes wingless and vestigial (![]()
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scute is a proneural gene belonging to the achaete/scute complex and a basic Helix Loop Helix (bHLH) transcription factor required for determination of SOPs in the anterior wing margin (![]()
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The failure to form SOPs in the wing discs of Lyra mutants predicts that the set of two cell divisions required for differentiation of margin bristles in the early pupa will not take place. The reason for the loss of the surrounding unspecialized margin cells in the adult wings of Lyra is not as obvious, but one hypothesis is that these cells also fail to proliferate. To test this we examined the mRNA expression pattern of string. string mRNA is normally expressed in the central cells of both the anterior and posterior wing margin during the later third instar larval stage (![]()
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
The data presented in this article provide strong evidence that Lyra mutations are gain-of-function/neomorphic alleles of senseless that cause overexpression of senseless in third instar imaginal discs. This ectopic expression of senseless causes a loss of anterior and posterior wing margin tissue. The data presented in this article provide a molecular framework to understand this phenotype.
Wingless is required for differentiation of bristles late in margin development (![]()
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| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
1 These authors contributed equally to this work. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank the Bloomington Stock Center and numerous members of the Drosophila community for flies and reagents. We also thank K. Norga for comments on the manuscript. R.N. is a research associate and H.J.B. is an investigator from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. This work was supported in part by a NASA grant to H.J.B. and Huda Zogbhi.
Manuscript received July 31, 2000; Accepted for publication October 13, 2000.
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