Dominant and recessive mutations define functional domains of Toll, a transmembrane protein required for dorsal-ventral polarity in the Drosophila embryo.
- 1 May 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in Genes & Development
- Vol. 5 (5) , 797-807
- https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.5.5.797
Abstract
The asymmetry of the dorsal-ventral pattern of the Drosophila embryo appears to depend on the ventral activation of the transmembrane Toll protein. The Toll protein is found around the entire dorsal-ventral circumference of the embryo, and it appears to act as a receptor for a ventral, extracellular signal and to then relay that signal to the cytoplasm in ventral regions of the embryo. Three of five recessive loss-of-function alleles of Toll are caused by point mutations in the region of the cytoplasmic domain of Toll that is similar to the mammalian interleukin-1 receptor, supporting the hypothesis that Toll acts as a signal-transducing receptor. Nine dominant gain-of-function alleles that cause Toll to be active in dorsal, as well as ventral, regions of the embryo are caused by mutations in the extracellular domain. Three of the dominant alleles appear to cause the protein to be constitutively active and are caused by cysteine-to-tyrosine changes immediately outside the transmembrane domain. All six of the remaining dominant alleles require the presence of a wild-type transmembrane Toll protein for their ventralizing effect and all encode truncated proteins that lack the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cloning of the p50 DNA binding subunit of NF-κB: Homology to rel and dorsalCell, 1990
- The DNA binding subunit of NF-κB is identical to factor KBF1 and homologous to the rel oncogene productCell, 1990
- Signal transduction by receptors with tyrosine kinase activityPublished by Elsevier ,1990
- Cloning of the human and murine interleukin-7 receptors: Demonstration of a soluble form and homology to a new receptor superfamilyCell, 1990
- Human Diabetes Associated with a Deletion of the Tyrosine Kinase Domain of the Insulin ReceptorScience, 1989
- cDNA Expression Cloning of the IL-1 Receptor, a Member of the Immunoglobulin SuperfamilyScience, 1988
- Interleukin-1 stimulates diacylglycerol production in T lymphocytes by a novel mechanismCell, 1988
- Establishment of dorsal-ventral polarity in the Drosophila embryo: Genetic studies on the role of the Toll gene productCell, 1985
- Establishment of dorsal-ventral polarity in the drosophila embryo: The induction of polarity by the Toll gene productPublished by Elsevier ,1985
- Two types of amino acid substitutions in protein evolutionJournal of Molecular Evolution, 1979