crooked legs
The crol gene is induced by ecdysone
during the onset of metamorphosis. CROL mRNA can be detected in mid-third instar
larvae, consistent with the expression of beta-galactosidase in the
CNS of crol4418 flies at this stage in development.
The level of CROL mRNA then increases in late third instar
larvae, in parallel with the high titer ecdysone pulse that
triggers puparium formation. The levels of crol
transcription decrease to low levels in mid-prepupae and then
rise significantly in 12 hour prepupae, following the ecdysone
pulse that triggers head eversion. This correspondence between
the rises in ecdysone titer and the induction of crol
transcription are consistent with crol being an ecdysone-inducible
gene, subject to regulation by the Ecdysone receptor. To test this hypothesis more directly, salivary
glands were dissected from mid-third instar larvae and cultured
for 4 hours in the absence or presence of ecdysone. RNA was
then isolated and crol transcription was analyzed by northern
blot hybridization. This study revealed that CROL
mRNA levels are induced approximately two-fold by
ecdysone, similar to the level of induction seen in vivo in late
third instar larvae. A similar induction of crol transcription is
seen in cultures of mixed larval organs treated with ecdysone. These observations support the hypothesis
that crol transcription is inducible by ecdysone, but the
relatively low level of induction suggests that other factors may
contribute to this regulation (D'Avino, 1998).
EcR and E74B are potential targets of Crol. In order to determine if crol functions in gene activation
hierarchies during metamorphosis, the temporal patterns of transcription
for a number of ecdysone primary- and secondary-response
genes were examined in crol mutant animals. These include the EcR ecdysone receptor gene as well as the
BR-C, E74A, E74B, E75A, E75B, DHR3 and betaFTZ-F1. E75A
and E75B are two isoforms of the E75 early puff gene that
encodes orphan members of the nuclear receptor superfamily. DHR3 and betaFTZ-F1 encode
distinct orphan receptors, with DHR3 functioning as an inducer
of ßFTZ-F1 expression in mid-prepupae. E75B inhibits this
DHR3 activation function through direct heterodimerization. betaFTZ-F1, in turn, appears to function as
a competence factor that facilitates the reinduction of the early
genes by ecdysone in late prepupae.
DHR3 is specifically expressed in early prepupae and is
unaffected by crol mutations. In contrast, the
other genes are all expressed at later stages and, interestingly,
their transcription is selectively reduced in mid- and late
crol 4418 mutant prepupae. EcR and E74B are both
submaximally transcribed in crol 4418 mid-prepupae.
Similarly, the peak of BR-C, E74A, E75A and E75B
transcription in response to the prepupal ecdysone pulse is
significantly reduced, while the earlier induction of these genes
in response to the late larval ecdysone pulse is unaffected. Consistent with the stage-specificity of this mutant
phenotype, a significant reduction in the
transcription of the stage-specific early gene E93 is also seen. The timing of these transcriptional
responses confirms that crol mutations have no effect on the
duration of larval and prepupal development, but rather
indicates that crol is required for the proper magnitude of
ecdysone-induced gene expression in prepupae. The level of
betaFTZ-F1 mRNA is also reduced in crol 4418 /Df mutants. However, crol 6470 homozygotes show only an approximate
two-fold reduction in betaFTZ-F1 mRNA levels, yet the reduction
in early gene transcription in these mutants is indistinguishable
from that seen in crol 4418 mutants. This
observation suggests that crol works independently of
betaFTZ-F1 to regulate the prepupal genetic response to ecdysone (D'Avino, 1998).
See the embryonic expression pattern of crol at the Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project Patterns of Gene Expression Site
The crol 4418 allele was derived from a P-lacZ enhancer trap mutagenesis, and thus carries a lacZ reporter gene that should provide an indication of the temporal and spatial patterns of crol expression. lacZ is induced in leg imaginal discs, salivary glands, and the central nervous system (CNS) of crol 4418 /+ late third instar larvae and prepupae. This induction of lacZ expression is coincident with the high titer ecdysone pulse that triggers puparium formation suggesting that crol expression is regulated by ecdysone. Expression of lacZ can be detected initially in leg imaginal discs isolated from late third instar larvae (-4 hours) and is restricted to the precursors of the tarsal segments. This expression expands in early prepupal leg discs to the precursors of the femur and tibia. Other imaginal discs in crol 4418 animals do not express lacZ. Expression of lacZ in the salivary glands is induced at puparium formation, slightly later than lacZ induction in leg discs. An identical pattern of expression is present in both fat bodies and trachea. In contrast, beta-galactosidase can be detected in the ventral ganglion and presumptive optic lobes of the CNS in mid-third instar larvae. Expression in these cell types increases noticeably at puparium formation, in apparent synchrony with lacZ expression in the salivary gland. Interestingly, lacZ is also expressed specifically in the corpus allatum of the ring gland at all stages examined. The corpus allatum is the endocrine organ responsible for releasing juvenile hormone. A possible function for crol in this cell type is, however, difficult to predict since the role of juvenile hormone is not well understood during pre-adult Drosophila development (D'Avino, 1998).
Appel, L. F., Prout, M., Abu-Shumays, R., Hammonds, A., Garbe, J. C.,
Fristrom, D. and Fristrom, J. (1993). The Drosophila Stubble-stubbloid
gene encodes an apparent transmembrane serine protease required for
epithelial morphogenesis. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 90: 4937-4941.
Beaton, A. H., Kiss, I., Fristrom, D. and Fristrom, J. W. (1988). Interaction
of the Stubble-stubbloid locus and the Broad-Complex of Drosophila
melanogaster. Genetics 120: 453-464
D'Avino, P. P. and Thummel, C. S. (1998). crooked legs encodes
a family of zinc finger proteins required for leg morphogenesis and ecdysone-regulated gene expression during Drosophila metamorphosis. Development 125: 1733-1745.
D'Avino, P. P. and Thummel, C. S. (2000). The ecdysone regulatory pathway controls wing morphogenesis and integrin expression during Drosophila metamorphosis. Dev. Biol. 220(2): 211-224
Emery, J. G. (1995). Identification and characterization of genes regulated by
the Broad-Complex, a transcription factor necessary for Drosophila
metamorphosis. Ph.D. thesis, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Ward, R. E., et al. (2003). GFP in living animals reveals dynamic developmental responses to ecdysone during Drosophila metamorphosis. Dev. Biol. 256: 389-402. 12679111
crooked legs:
Biological Overview
| Regulation
| Developmental Biology
| Effects of Mutation
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