Maternal regulation of zerknüllt: a homoeobox gene controlling differentiation of dorsal tissues in Drosophila

Abstract
The homoeobox gene zerknüllt (zen) plays an important role in the differentiation of dorsal tissues during Drosophila development. zen- embryos show transformations in the dorsal-most regions of the fate map, and lack several tissues that normally derive from these regions, including the amnioserosa and optic lobe. zen displays a simple dorsal on/ventral off pattern as early as cleavage cycle 10-11 (ref. 2). We have prepared a polyclonal antibody against a full-length zen protein, and used this to examine its pattern of expression in mutants that disrupt dorsal-ventral polarity. Most or all of the maternally expressed genes that are involved in this process have been previously identified and fall into two classes, so called 'dorsalizers' and 'ventralizers' (see refs 4-7, reviewed in ref. 8). On the basis of our analysis of zen expression in each of these maternal mutants we propose that one or more of the dorsalizing genes encodes a repressor which inhibits the expression of zen in ventral regions of developing embryos. The ventralizing gene cactus might play an important role in restricting the activity of this repressor to ventral regions, thereby permitting the activation of zen in those dorsal tissues where its function is critically required.