Abstract

The Drosophila genes spalt major (salm) and spalt-related (salr) encode Zn-finger transcription factors regulated by the Decapentaplegic (Dpp) signalling pathway in the wing imaginal disc. The function of these genes is required for cell survival and proliferation in the central region of the wing disc, and also for vein patterning in the lateral regions. The identification of direct Salm and Salr target genes, and the analysis of their functions, are critical steps towards understanding the genetic control of growth and patterning of the Drosophila wing imaginal disc by the Dpp pathway. To identify candidate Salm/Salr target genes, we have compared the expression profile of salm/salr knockdown wing discs with control discs in microarray experiments. We studied by in situ hybridization the expression pattern of the genes whose mRNA levels varied significantly, and uncovered a complex transcription landscape regulated by the Spalt proteins in the wing disc. Interestingly, candidate Salm/Salr targets include genes which expression is turned off and genes which expression is positively regulated by Salm/Salr. Furthermore, loss-of-function phenotypic analysis of these genes indicates, for a fraction of them, a requirement for wing growth and patterning. The identification and analysis of candidate Salm/Salr target genes opens a new avenue to reconstruct the genetic structure of the wing, linking the activity of the Dpp pathway to the development of this epithelial tissue.

Highlights

  • The coordination of growth and patterning during the development of tissues and organs depends on the activity of signalling pathways acting in a context-dependent manner

  • It is likely that Spalt major (Salm)/Spalt related (Salr) regulate the expression of a collection of target genes that in turn mediate the variety of functions assigned to them

  • We found that after 24 hours at 29°C (T24) the expression of Salm was already undetected in the wing blade (Fig 1C-1C’’; salEPv-Gal4 UAS-GFP /UAS-salm-i; tub-Gal80ts / UAS-salr-i), whereas the expression of GFP was strong in the central domain of the wing (Fig 1C-1C’)

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Summary

Introduction

The coordination of growth and patterning during the development of tissues and organs depends on the activity of signalling pathways acting in a context-dependent manner. Several targets and additional components of the transcriptional regulation events triggered by Dpp signalling have being identified in Drosophila [2] including the T-box containing protein Bifid [4] and the Zn-fingers transcription factors Spalt major (Salm) and Spalt related (Salr) [5]. These proteins confer correct epithelial morphology and cell affinity to the central domain of the wing, and regulate cell proliferation, viability and vein pattern formation [6,7,8]

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