Abstract

In Drosophila, the adaptor protein Stardust is essential for the stabilization of the polarity determinant Crumbs in various epithelial tissues, including the embryonic epidermis, the follicular epithelium and photoreceptor cells of the compound eye. In turn, Stardust recruits another adaptor protein, PATJ, to the subapical region to support adherens junction formation and morphogenetic events. Moreover, Stardust binds to Lin-7, which is dispensable in epithelial cells but functions in postsynaptic vesicle fusion. Finally, Stardust has been reported to bind directly to PAR-6, thereby linking the Crumbs–Stardust–PATJ complex to the PAR-6/aPKC complex. PAR-6 and aPKC are also capable of directly binding Bazooka (the Drosophila homologue of PAR-3) to form the PAR/aPKC complex, which is essential for apical–basal polarity and cell–cell contact formation in most epithelia. However, little is known about the physiological relevance of these interactions in the embryonic epidermis of Drosophila in vivo. Thus, we performed a structure–function analysis of the annotated domains with GFP-tagged Stardust and evaluated the localization and function of the mutant proteins in epithelial cells of the embryonic epidermis. The data presented here confirm a crucial role of the PDZ domain in binding Crumbs and recruiting the protein to the subapical region. However, the isolated PDZ domain is not capable of being recruited to the cortex, and the SH3 domain is essential to support the binding to Crumbs. Notably, the conserved N-terminal regions (ECR1 and ECR2) are not crucial for epithelial polarity. Finally, the GUK domain plays an important role for the protein's function, which is not directly linked to Crumbs stabilization, and the L27N domain is essential for epithelial polarization independently of recruiting PATJ.

Highlights

  • In Drosophila, the adaptor protein Stardust is essential for the stabilization of the polarity determinant Crumbs in various epithelial tissues, including the embryonic epidermis, the follicular epithelium and photoreceptor cells of the compound eye

  • PAR-6 and aPKC are capable of directly binding Bazooka to form the PAR/aPKC complex, which is essential for apical–basal polarity and cell–cell contact formation in most epithelia

  • Two highly conserved short amino acid motifs (ECR1 = HREMAVDCP and ECR2 = RRRREEE, figure 1a) have been identified in mammalian Pals1 to mediate an interaction with the PDZ domain of PAR-6 [24,25,26]

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Summary

Plasmids

The ORF of Sdt-F (formerly described as Sdt-B1) was cloned into pENTR (Life Technologies). The ORF of Sdt variants was subcloned into UWGattB (modified from UWG, which was obtained from the Drosophila Genomic Resource Center as described before [29]) vector by clonase reaction (Life Technologies)

Fly stocks and genetics
Generation of an antibody against Sdt
Immunoprecipitation and western blotting
Immunohistochemistry
Sdt exhibits several evolutionary conserved protein-interaction domains
The PDZ and SH3 domain of Sdt cooperate to stabilize the Crb–Sdt complex
The L27N domain exhibits functions beyond binding of PATJ
Full Text
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