Table of contents
Imaginal Discs: The Genetic and Cellular Logic of Pattern Formation
by Lewis I. Held, Jr.
- Preface
- Chapter One Cell Lineage vs. Intercellular Signaling
- Discs are not clones.
- No part of a disc is a clone, except claws and tiny sense organs.
- Cells belong to lineage "compartments".
- Chapter Two The Bristle
- Numb segregates asymmetrically and dictates bristle cell fates.
- Delta needs to activate Notch, but not as a signal per se.
- Amnesic cells can use sequential gating to simulate a binary code.
- Notch must go to the nucleus to function.
- E(spl)-C genes are Su(H) targets but play no role in the SOP lineage.
- The transcription factor Tramtrack implements some cell identities.
- Hairless titrates Su(H).
- Several other genes help determine the 5 cell fates.
- Pox neuro and Cut specify bristle type.
- Bract cells are induced by bristle cells.
- Macrochaetes and microchaetes differ in size but not in kind.
- Chapter Three Bristle Patterns
- Surprisingly, different macrochaete sites use different signals.
- Prepatterns may contain hidden "singularities".
- How Achaete and Scute control bristles was debated for decades.
- In 1989, Achaete and Scute were found to mark "proneural clusters".
- In 1995, the old AS-C paradigm toppled and a new one emerged.
- Proneural "spots" shrink to SOP "dots".
- The SOP uses a feedback loop to raise its Ac and Sc levels.
- Two other bHLH genes (asense and daughterless) assist SOPs.
- "Lateral" or "mutual" inhibition ensures one SOP per PNC.
- Notch-pathway and proneural genes are functionally coupled.
- Doses of Notch-pathway genes can bias the SOP decision.
- Extra SOPs could be inhibited by contact or diffusion (or both).
- Scabrous may be the diffusible SOP inhibitor.
- Inhibitory fields dictate the spacing intervals of microchaetes.
- Microchaetes come from proneural stripes, not spots.
- Hairy paints "antineural" stripes on the legs.
- Leg bristles use extra fine-tuning tricks.
- Chemosensory leg bristles are patterned like notal macrochaetes.
- Extramacrochaetae superimposes an uneven antineural "mask".
- Dose dependency implies that HLH proteins "compute" bristles.
- Robustness of patterning may be due to a tolerant time window.
- Atonal and Amos are proneural agents for other types of sensilla.
- Other (upstream) pathways govern bristle patterning.
- Chapter Four Origin and Growth of Discs
- Segmentation genes set the stage for disc initiation.
- Prepatterns and gradients clashed in trying to explain homeosis.
- Homeotic genes implement regional identities.
- Wing and haltere discs "grow out" from 2nd- and 3rd-leg discs.
- Thoracic discs arise at Wingless/Engrailed boundaries.
- Cell lineage within compartments is indeterminate.
- The Polar Coordinate Model linked regeneration to development.
- But regeneration has peculiarities that set it apart.
- Chapter Five The Leg Disc
- The Molecular Epoch of disc research was launched in 1991.
- BatesonĖs Rule (1894) governs symmetry planes in branched legs.
- MeinhardtĖs Boundary Model deftly explained BatesonĖs Rule.
- The Boundary and PC Models jousted in a "Paradigm War".
- Hh, Dpp, and Wg are the chief intercellular signaling molecules.
- P-type cells use Hh to "talk" to A-type cells nearby.
- Hh elicits expression of Dpp and Wg along the A/P boundary.
- Dpp dorsalizes and Wg ventralizes, or do they?
- Dpp and Wg are mutually antagonistic.
- Dpp and Wg jointly initiate distal outgrowth.
- But Dpp seems more crucial than Wg as a growth factor.
- The A/P boundary can migrate when its "jailors" are "asleep".
- Regeneration is due to a Hh spot in the peripodial membrane.
- The Polar Coordinate Model died in 1999.
- How Hh, Dpp, and Wg move is not known, nor is their range.
- Whether Dpp and Wg travel along curved paths is not known.
- Hairy links global to local patterning.
- Questions remain about the Hh-Dpp-Wg circuitry.
- Distal-less is necessary and sufficient for distalization.
- Proximal and distal cells have different affinities.
- Dachshund is induced at the Homothorax/Distal-less interface.
- Homothorax and Extradenticle govern the proximal disc region.
- Fasciclin II is induced at the BarH1/Aristaless interface.
- BarH1 and Bric à brac affect P-D identity, joints, and folds.
- Leg segmentation requires Notch signaling.
- Chapter Six The Wing Disc
- The A-P axis is governed by Hh and Dpp but not by Wg.
- Dpp turns on omb and spalt at different thresholds.
- Dpp regulates omb and spalt similarly despite clues to the contrary.
- Dpp does not regulate tkv in 3rd instar despite clues to the contrary.
- A vs. P identities might explain how a straight A/P line emerges.
- But the A/P line appears to straighten via a signaling mechanism.
- Intercalation is due to a tendency of Dpp gradients to rise.
- The variable height of Dpp gradients makes them appear seamless.
- A Wg gradient specifies cell fates along the wingĖs D-V axis.
- Perpendicular (Dpp x Wg) gradients suggest Cartesian coordinates.
- But cells do not seem to record positional values per se.
- WgĖs repression of Dfz2 is inconsequential.
- ApterousĖs role along the D-V axis resembles EngrailedĖs A-P role.
- Chip cooperates with Apterous, and "Dorsal wing" acts downstream.
- Serrate and Delta prod Notch to evoke Wg at the D/V line.
- Fringe prevents Notch from responding to Serrate.
- The core D-V circuit plugs into a complex network.
- The wing-notum duality is established by Wg and Vein.
- But Vestigial and Scalloped dictate "wingness" per se.
- Straightening of the D/V border requires Notch signaling and Ap.
- Straightening of veins may rely on similar tricks.
- Two cell types predominate in the wing blade: vein and intervein.
- Veins come from proveins that look like proneural fields.
- But the resemblance is only superficial.
- All veins use the EGFR pathway.
- But interveins also use the EGFR pathway (at a later time).
- Veins 3 and 4 are positioned by the Hh pathway.
- Veins 2 and 5 are positioned by the Dpp pathway.
- The Dpp pathway later implements the vein state.
- A cousin of Dpp (Gbb) fosters the A and P cross-veins.
- Vein 1 uses a combination of Dpp and Wg signals.
- Macrochaetes are sited by various "prepattern" inputs.
- How bristle axons get wired into the CNS is not known.
- Chapter Seven The Eye Disc
- Compound eyes have ~750 facets, with 8 photoreceptors per facet.
- Unlike the bristle, the ommatidium is not a clone.
- The eye has D and V compartments (despite doubts to the contrary).
- The Iroquois Complex controls D-V polarity via Fringe and Notch.
- A morphogenetic wave creates the ommatidial lattice.
- D-V polarity depends on a rivalry between R3 and R4 precursors.
- R1-R8 cells arise sequentially, implying a cascade of inductions.
- But the final cell (R7) is induced by the first one (R8).
- Various restraints prevent more than one cell from becoming R7.
- The information content of the inductive signals may be only 1 bit.
- No transcription factor "code" has yet been found for R cells.
- The lattice is created by inhibitory fields around R8 precursors.
- The lattice is tightened when excess cells die.
- Eye bristles arise independently of ommatidia.
- The MF operates like a moving A/P boundary.
- Dpp and Wg control the rate of MF progress.
- The MF originates via different circuitry.
- Chapter Eight Homeosis
- BX-C and ANT-C specify gross metameric identities along the body.
- Ubx enables T3 discs to develop differently from T2 discs.
- But Ubx does so by directly managing target genes in multiple echelons.
- Pc-G and Trx-G "memory" proteins keep homeotic genes on or off.
- Homothorax, Distal-less, and Spineless specify leg vs. antennal fates.
- If a "master gene" exists for the eye, then it is also a micromanager.
- The manifold "enhanceosome" is a wondrous Gordian Knot.
- The deepest enigma is how evolution rewired the circuit elements.
- Epilogue
- Appendix 1 Glossary of Protein Domains
- Appendix 2 Inventory of Models, Mysteries, Devices, and Epiphanies
- Appendix 3 Genes That Can Alter Cell Fates Within the (5-Cell) Mechanosensory Bristle Organ
- Appendix 4 Genes That Can Transform One Type of Bristle Into Another or Into a Different Type of Sense Organ
- Appendix 5 Genes That Can Alter Bristle Number by Directly Affecting SOP Equivalence Groups or Inhibitory Fields
- Appendix 6 Signal Transduction Pathways: Hedgehog, Decapentaplegic, and Wingless
- Appendix 7 Commentaries on the Pithier Figures
- References
- Index
Imaginal Discs Index
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