Abstract

The Bicoid (Bcd) protein gradient in Drosophila serves as a paradigm for gradient formation in textbooks. The SDD model (synthesis, diffusion, degradation) was proposed to explain the formation of the gradient. The SDD model states that the bcd mRNA is located at the anterior pole of the embryo at all times and serves a source for translation of the Bicoid protein, coupled with diffusion and uniform degradation throughout the embryo. Recently, the ARTS model (active RNA transport, synthesis) challenged the SDD model. In this model, the mRNA is transported at the cortex along microtubules to form a mRNA gradient which serves as template for the production of Bcd, hence little Bcd movement is involved. To test the validity of the SDD model, we developed a sensitive assay to monitor the movement of Bcd during early nuclear cycles. We observed that Bcd moved along the cortex and not in a broad front towards the posterior as the SDD model would have predicted. We subjected embryos to hypoxia where the mRNA remained strictly located at the tip at all times, while the protein was allowed to move freely, thus conforming to an ideal experimental setup to test the SDD model. Unexpectedly, Bcd still moved along the cortex. Moreover, cortical Bcd movement was sparse, even under longer hypoxic conditions. Hypoxic embryos treated with drugs compromising microtubule and actin function affected Bcd cortical movement and stability. Vinblastine treatment allowed the simulation of an ideal SDD model whereby the protein moved throughout the embryo in a broad front. In unfertilized embryos, the Bcd protein followed the mRNA which itself was transported into the interior of the embryo utilizing a hitherto undiscovered microtubular network. Our data suggest that the Bcd gradient formation is probably more complex than previously anticipated.

Highlights

  • The maternal bicoid gene in Drosophila is described a paradigm in textbooks for gradient formation

  • The first one, termed SDD model, after synthesis, diffusion and uniform degradation [1] states that the bcd mRNA stays at the anterior tip at all stages and that, upon translation of the protein, Bcd diffuses to the posterior, followed by uniform degradation

  • The SDD model was challenged in 2009 with a report showing that the Bcd protein movement is not the cause for gradient formation, but rather the existence of a bcd mRNA gradient which serves as template for Bcd a gradient protein translation [2,3,4,5]

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Summary

Introduction

The maternal bicoid (bcd) gene in Drosophila is described a paradigm in textbooks for gradient formation. The SDD model was proclaimed as a dogma without experimental evidence and has stayed in textbooks for more than two decades as a paradigm for gradient formation. The SDD model was challenged in 2009 with a report showing that the Bcd protein movement is not the cause for gradient formation, but rather the existence of a bcd mRNA gradient which serves as template for Bcd a gradient protein translation [2,3,4,5]. In 2011, the SDD model was modified to the “extended SDD model” by [6] whereby a small mRNA gradient reaching about 80% egg length would contribute, but would not fully account for Bcd protein gradient formation, concluding that the major cause for gradient formation would still be Bcd protein movement

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