Abstract

Axis specification and segment determination in dipteran insects are an excellent model system for comparative analyses of gene network evolution. Antero-posterior polarity of the embryo is established through systems of maternal morphogen gradients. In Drosophila melanogaster, the anterior system acts through opposing gradients of Bicoid (Bcd) and Caudal (Cad), while the posterior system involves Nanos (Nos) and Hunchback (Hb) protein. These systems act redundantly. Both Bcd and Hb need to be eliminated to cause a complete loss of polarity resulting in mirror-duplicated abdomens, so-called bicaudal phenotypes. In contrast, knock-down of bcd alone is sufficient to induce double abdomens in non-drosophilid cyclorrhaphan dipterans such as the hoverfly Episyrphus balteatus or the scuttle fly Megaselia abdita. We investigate conserved and divergent aspects of axis specification in the cyclorrhaphan lineage through a detailed study of the establishment and regulatory effect of maternal gradients in M. abdita. Our results show that the function of the anterior maternal system is highly conserved in this species, despite the loss of maternal cad expression. In contrast, hb does not activate gap genes in this species. The absence of this activatory role provides a precise genetic explanation for the loss of polarity upon bcd knock-down in M. abdita, and suggests a general scenario in which the posterior maternal system is increasingly replaced by the anterior one during the evolution of the cyclorrhaphan dipteran lineage.

Highlights

  • Axis formation and segment determination in the vinegar fly Drosophila melanogaster are among the most thoroughly studied developmental processes today [1,2,3,4,5]

  • Our results indicate that the role of the posterior system in axis specification has been lost in E. balteatus and M. abdita, while it still retains some of its ancestral functionality in D. melanogaster

  • We have investigated the establishment of maternal gradients and their role in gap gene regulation in the scuttle fly M. abdita

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Summary

Introduction

Axis formation and segment determination in the vinegar fly Drosophila melanogaster are among the most thoroughly studied developmental processes today [1,2,3,4,5]. They offer an ideal starting point for the comparative study of development and the evolution of pattern-forming gene regulatory networks. In D. melanogaster, maternal protein gradients are either formed by localisation of mRNA at the anterior or posterior pole of the embryo, or by regionally specific translational repression of ubiquitous maternal transcripts [4,5]. Unlike Bcd, Nos is not a transcriptional regulator: its only role is to translationally regulate ubiquitous maternal hunchback (hb) mRNA, leading to an anterior gradient of maternal Hb protein [24,25,26]

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