21830 articles – 15616 references  [version française]

hal-00497412, version 1

JNK signalling controls remodelling of the segment boundary through cell reprogramming during Drosophila morphogenesis.

Melanie Gettings 1, Fanny Serman 12, Raphaël Rousset 1, Patrizia Bagnerini 3, Luis Almeida 2, Stéphane Noselli 1

Plos Biology 8, 6 (2010) e1000390

Abstract: Segments are fundamental units in animal development which are made of distinct cell lineages separated by boundaries. Although boundaries show limited plasticity during their formation for sharpening, cell lineages make compartments that become tightly restricted as development goes on. Here, we characterize a unique case of breaking of the segment boundary in late drosophila embryos. During dorsal closure, specific cells from anterior compartments cross the segment boundary and enter the adjacent posterior compartments. This cell mixing behaviour is driven by an anterior-to-posterior reprogramming mechanism involving de novo expression of the homeodomain protein Engrailed. Mixing is accompanied by stereotyped local cell intercalation, converting the segment boundary into a relaxation compartment important for tension-release during morphogenesis. This process of lineage switching and cell remodelling is controlled by JNK signalling. Our results reveal plasticity of segment boundaries during late morphogenesis and a role for JNK-dependent developmental reprogramming in this process.

  • 1:  Institut de signalisation, biologie du développement et cancer (ISBDC)
  • CNRS : UMR6543 – Université Nice Sophia Antipolis [UNS]
  • 2:  Laboratoire Jean Alexandre Dieudonné (JAD)
  • CNRS : UMR6621 – Université Nice Sophia Antipolis [UNS]
  • 3:  Dipartimento di Ingegneria della produzione, termoenergetica e modelli matematici (DIPTEM)
  • Università degli studi di Genova
  • Domain : Life Sciences/Development Biology
 
  • hal-00497412, version 1
  • oai:hal.archives-ouvertes.fr:hal-00497412
  • From: 
  • Submitted on: Monday, 5 July 2010 08:48:31
  • Updated on: Monday, 5 July 2010 08:48:31