cappuccino and spire: two unique maternal-effect loci required for both the anteroposterior and dorsoventral patterns of the Drosophila embryo.
Open Access
- 1 September 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in Genes & Development
- Vol. 3 (9) , 1437-1452
- https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.3.9.1437
Abstract
Cappuccino and spire are unique Drosophila maternal-effect loci that participate in pattern formation in both the anteroposterior and dorsoventral axes of the early embryo. Mutant females produce embryos lacking pole cells, polar granules, and normal abdominal segmentation. They share these defects with the posterior group of maternal-effect genes. Although embryos are defective in abdominal segmentation, in double mutant combinations with Bicaudal D, abdominal segments can be formed in the anterior half of the egg. This indicates that embryos produced by mutant females contain the 'posterior determinant' required for abdominal segmentation (Nüsslein-Volhard et al. 1987) and suggests that the wild-type gene products are not required for production of the posterior determinant but, rather, for its localization or stabilization. The vasa protein, a component of polar granules, is not localized at the posterior pole of mutant egg chambers or embryos, providing additional support for the hypothesis that localization to or stabilization of substances at the posterior pole of the egg chamber is defective in mutant females. Females mutant for the strongest alleles also produce dorsalized embryos. Phenotypic analysis reveals that these dorsalized embryos also have abdominal segmentation defects. The mutant phenotypes can be ordered in a series of increasing severity. Pole cell formation is most sensitive to loss of functional gene products, followed by abdominal segmentation, whereas normal dorsoventral patterning is the least sensitive to loss of functional gene products. In addition, mutant females contain egg chambers that appear to be dorsalized, resulting in the production of eggs with dorsalized eggshells. Germ-line mosaics indicate that cappuccino and spire are required in the oocyte-nurse cell complex. This suggests that the eggshell phenotype results from altered pattern in the underlying germ cell. Also, we defined the epistatic relationships between several early patterning loci, on the basis of an analysis of the eggs and embryos produced by females doubly mutant for cappuccino or spire and other loci that affect the pattern of both the egg and the embryo. On the basis of our current knowledge of the genes involved in this process, we formulated a working model for the early steps in dorsoventral patterning.This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Accurate measurements of dynamics and reproducibility in small genetic networksMolecular Systems Biology, 2013
- The molecular genetics of embryonic pattern formation in DrosophilaNature, 1988
- Role of the oocyte nucleus in determination of the dorsoventral polarity of Drosophila as revealed by molecular analysis of the K10 geneGenes & Development, 1988
- The bicoid protein determines position in the Drosophila embryo in a concentration-dependent mannerPublished by Elsevier ,1988
- A gradient of bicoid protein in Drosophila embryosCell, 1988
- Dorsal—ventral embryonic pattern genes of DrosophilaTrends in Genetics, 1987
- Involvement of the pumilio gene in the transport of an abdominal signal in the Drosophila embryoNature, 1987
- Developmental analysis of the torso-like phenotype in Drosophila produced by a maternal-effect locusDevelopmental Biology, 1986
- The effects of zygotic lethal mutations on female germ-line functions in DrosophilaDevelopmental Biology, 1984
- Localization of antigenic determinants in whole Drosophila embryosDevelopmental Biology, 1983