6533b7d7fe1ef96bd1268f0a
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Impact of Ultrabithorax alternative splicing on Drosophila embryonic nervous system development.
Ioanna KoltsakiChristian HessingerAna Rogulja-ortmannAenne GeyerSimone Rennersubject
Central Nervous SystemEmbryologyanimal structuresNeurogenesisGenes InsectBiologyCell fate determinationNeuroblastAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsProtein IsoformsHox geneUltrabithoraxGeneticsHomeodomain ProteinsAlternative splicingGenes HomeoboxGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalCell biologyAlternative Splicingembryonic structuresRNA splicingDrosophilaNeural developmentDrosophila ProteinDevelopmental BiologyTranscription Factorsdescription
Hox genes control divergent segment identities along the anteroposterior body axis of bilateral animals by regulating a large number of processes in a cell context-specific manner. How Hox proteins achieve this functional diversity is a long-standing question in developmental biology. In this study we investigate the role of alternative splicing in functional specificity of the Drosophila Hox gene Ultrabithorax (Ubx). We focus specifically on the embryonic central nervous system (CNS) and provide a description of temporal expression patterns of three major Ubx isoforms during development of this tissue. These analyses imply distinct functions for individual isoforms in different stages of neural development. We also examine the set of Ubx isoforms expressed in two isoform-specific Ubx mutant strains and analyze for the first time the effects of splicing defects on regional neural stem cell (neuroblast) identity. Our findings support the notion of specific isoforms having different effects in providing individual neuroblasts with positional identity along the anteroposterior body axis, as well as being involved in regulation of progeny cell fate.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2015-11-01 | Mechanisms of development |