The Drosophila homologue of vertebrate myogenic-determination genes encodes a transiently expressed nuclear protein marking primary myogenic cells.
- 1 May 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 88 (9) , 3782-3786
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.88.9.3782
Abstract
We have isolated a cDNA clone, called Dmyd for Drosophila myogenic-determination gene, that encodes a protein with structural and functional characteristics similar to the members of the vertebrate MyoD family. Dmyd clone encodes a polypeptide of 332 amino acids with 82% identity to MyoD in the 41 amino acids of the putative helix-loop-helix region and 100% identity in the 13 amino acids of the basic domain proposed to contain the essential recognition code for muscle-specific gene activation. Low-stringency hybridizations indicate that Dmyd is not a member of a multigene family similar to MyoD in vertebrates. Dmyd is a nuclear protein in Drosophila, consistent with its role as a nuclear-gene regulatory factor, and is proposed to be a transiently expressed marker for muscle founder cells. We have used an 8-kilobase promoter fragment from the gene, which contains the first 55 amino acids of the Dmyd protein, joined to lacZ, to follow myogenic precursor cells into muscle fibers with antibodies to beta-galactosidase and to Dmyd. Unlike the myogenic factors in vertebrate muscle cells, Dmyd appears to be expressed at a much lower level in differentiated Drosophila muscles, so Dmyd cannot be followed continuously as a muscle marker. This fact is reflected in the loss of Dmyd RNA expression in 12- to 24-hr embryos, a major period of early myogenesis, as well as in the undetectable level of the nuclear antigen in primary cultures of embryonic and adult Drosophila muscle.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- The embryonic development of larval muscles in DrosophilaDevelopment, 1990
- Alternative myosin hinge regions are utilized in a tissue-specific fashion that correlates with muscle contraction speed.Genes & Development, 1990
- Posterior localization of vasa protein correlates with, but is not sufficient for, pole cell development.Genes & Development, 1990
- The Xenopus MyoD gene: an unlocalised maternal mRNA predates lineage- restricted expression in the early embryoDevelopment, 1990
- The MyoD DNA binding domain contains a recognition code for muscle-specific gene activationCell, 1990
- Single-step purification of polypeptides expressed in Escherichia coli as fusions with glutathione S-transferaseGene, 1988
- Comparison of the consensus sequence flanking translational start sites inDrosophilaand vertebratesNucleic Acids Research, 1987
- The engrailed locus of drosophila: Structural analysis of an embryonic transcriptCell, 1985
- A conserved DNA sequence in homoeotic genes of the Drosophila Antennapedia and bithorax complexesNature, 1984
- Antibodies to horseradish peroxidase as specific neuronal markers in Drosophila and in grasshopper embryos.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1982