Search results for "cell fate determination"

showing 10 items of 72 documents

Cyclin E acts under the control of Hox-genes as a cell fate determinant in the developing central nervous system.

2005

The mechanisms controlling the generation of cell diversity in the central nervous system belong to the major unsolved problems in developmental biology. The fly Drosophila melanogaster is a suitable model system to examine these mechanisms at the level of individually identifiable cells. Recently, we have provided evidence that CyclinE--largely independent of its role in cell proliferation--plays a critical role in the specification of neural stem cells (neuroblasts). CycE specifies neuronal fate within neuroblast lineages by acting upstream of glial factors (prospero and glial cell missing), whereby levels of CycE are controlled by homeotic genes, the master control genes regulating segme…

Central Nervous SystemCell fate determinationBiologyModels BiologicalNeuroblastCyclin EAnimalsHumansCell LineageHox geneMolecular BiologyGeneticsNeuronsStem CellsGenes HomeoboxGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationNeural stem cellCell biologyDrosophila melanogasterStem cellDrosophila melanogasterHomeotic geneDevelopmental biologyDevelopmental BiologyCell cycle (Georgetown, Tex.)
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Single cell transplantation reveals interspecific cell communication in Drosophila chimeras

1990

Abstract Cell –cell communication is not only a common strategy for cell fate specification in vertebrates, but plays important roles in invertebrate development as well. We report here on experiments testing the compatibility of mechanisms specifying cell fate among six different Drosophila species. Following interspecific transplantation, the development of single ectodermal cells was traced in order to test their abilities to proliferate and differentiate in a heterologous environment. Despite considerable differences in cell size and length of cell cycle among some of the species, the transplants gave rise to fully differentiated clones that were integrated into the host tissue. Clones …

Central Nervous SystemCell signalingChimeraHeterologousCell DifferentiationEctodermCell CommunicationAnatomyInterspecific competitionCell cycleBiologyCell fate determinationClone CellsCell biologyTransplantationMicroscopy Electronmedicine.anatomical_structureCell transplantationEctodermmedicineAnimalsDrosophilaMolecular BiologyCell DivisionDevelopmental BiologyDevelopment
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A critical role for Cyclin E in cell fate determination in the central nervous system of Drosophila melanogaster

2004

We have examined the process by which cell diversity is generated in neuroblast (NB) lineages in the central nervous system of Drosophila melanogaster. Thoracic NB6-4 (NB6-4t) generates both neurons and glial cells, whereas NB6-4a generates only glial cells in abdominal segments. This is attributed to an asymmetric first division of NB6-4t, localizing prospero (pros) and glial cell missing (gcm) only to the glial precursor cell, and a symmetric division of NB6-4a, where both daughter cells express pros and gcm. Here we show that the NB6-4t lineage represents the ground state, which does not require the input of any homeotic gene, whereas the NB6-4a lineage is specified by the homeotic genes…

Central Nervous SystemCyclin ELineage (genetic)Cell divisionDown-RegulationNerve Tissue ProteinsCell fate determinationNeuroblastCyclin EAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsCell LineageHomeodomain ProteinsNeuronsbiologyStem CellsNeuropeptidesGenes HomeoboxGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalNuclear ProteinsCell DifferentiationCell BiologyCell cyclebiology.organism_classificationGanglia InvertebrateCell biologyDNA-Binding ProteinsDrosophila melanogasterTrans-ActivatorsDrosophila melanogasterHomeotic geneNeurogliaTranscription FactorsNature Cell Biology
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Analysis of Drosophila salivary gland, epidermis and CNS development suggests an additional function of brinker in anterior-posterior cell fate speci…

2000

Salivary glands are simple structured organs which can serve as a model system in the study of organogenesis. Following a large EMS mutagenesis we have identified a number of genes required for normal salivary gland development. Mutations in the locus small salivary glands-1 (ssg-1) lead to a drastic reduction in the size of the salivary glands. The gene ssg-1 was cloned and subsequent sequence and genetic analysis showed identity to the recently published gene brinker. The salivary gland placode in brinker mutants appears reduced along both the anterior-posterior and dorso-ventral axis. Analysis of the brinker cuticle phenotype revealed a similar loss of anterior-posterior as well as later…

Central Nervous SystemEmbryologyReceptors SteroidEmbryo NonmammalianMutantLocus (genetics)OrganogenesisBiologyCell fate determinationSalivary GlandsNeuroblastBacterial ProteinsmedicineAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsAdhesins BacterialGeneBody PatterningEmbryonic InductionHomeodomain ProteinsSalivary glandGenetic Complementation TestNeuropeptidesChromosome MappingGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalCell DifferentiationAnatomyPhenotypeCell biologyRepressor Proteinsmedicine.anatomical_structureEpidermal CellsMutationInsect ProteinsDrosophilaEpidermisDevelopmental BiologyTranscription FactorsMechanisms of development
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Abdominal-A mediated repression of Cyclin E expression during cell-fate specification in the Drosophila central nervous system

2009

Homeotic/Hox genes are known to specify a given developmental pathway by regulating the expression of downstream effector genes. During embryonic CNS development of Drosophila, the Hox protein Abdominal-A (AbdA) is required for the specification of the abdominal NB6-4 lineage. It does so by down regulating the expression of the cell cycle regulator gene Dcyclin E (CycE). CycE is normally expressed in the thoracic NB6-4 lineage to give rise to mixed lineage of neurons and glia, while only glial cells are produced from the abdominal NB6-4 lineage due to the repression of CycE by AbdA. Here we investigate how AbdA represses the expression of CycE to define the abdominal fate of a single NB6-4 …

Central Nervous SystemEmbryologyTranscription GeneticRegulatorCell fate determinationBiologyAnimals Genetically ModifiedCyclin EAnimalsCell LineageTransgenesEnhancerHox genePsychological repressionIn Situ HybridizationRegulator geneHomeodomain ProteinsNeuronsGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalCell DifferentiationCell cycleMolecular biologyCell biologyDrosophila melanogasterHomeotic geneNeurogliaDevelopmental BiologyMechanisms of Development
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Impact of Ultrabithorax alternative splicing on Drosophila embryonic nervous system development.

2015

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 n…

Central Nervous SystemEmbryologyanimal structuresNeurogenesisGenes InsectBiologyCell fate determinationNeuroblastAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsProtein IsoformsHox geneUltrabithoraxGeneticsHomeodomain ProteinsAlternative splicingGenes HomeoboxGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalCell biologyAlternative Splicingembryonic structuresRNA splicingDrosophilaNeural developmentDrosophila ProteinDevelopmental BiologyTranscription FactorsMechanisms of development
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Multiple roles forHoxgenes in segment-specific shaping of CNS lineages

2008

In this article we highlight some of the recently accumulating evidence showing that Hox genes are involved at different steps during the development of neural cell lineages to control segmental patterning of the CNS. In addition to their well-known early role in establishing segmental identities, Hox genes act on neural stem cells and their progeny at various stages during embryonic and postembryonic development to control proliferation, cell fate and/or apoptosis in a segment-specific manner. This leads to differential shaping of serially homologous lineages and thus to structural diversification of segmental CNS units (neuromeres) in adaptation to their specific functional tasks in proce…

Central Nervous SystemGeneticsCellular differentiationGenes HomeoboxApoptosisCell DifferentiationBiologyCell fate determinationNeuromerebiology.organism_classificationEmbryonic stem cellNeural stem cellCell biologyDrosophila melanogasterInsect ScienceAnimalsDrosophila melanogasterHox geneNeural cellCell ProliferationFly
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Hunchback is required for the specification of the early sublineage of neuroblast 7-3 in the Drosophila central nervous system.

2002

The Drosophila ventral nerve cord (VNC) derives from neuroblasts (NBs), which mostly divide in a stem cell mode and give rise to defined NB lineages characterized by specific sets of sequentially generated neurons and/or glia cells. To understand how different cell types are generated within a NB lineage, we have focused on the NB7-3 lineage as a model system. This NB gives rise to four individually identifiable neurons and we show that these cells are generated from three different ganglion mother cells (GMCs). The finding that the transcription factor Hunchback (Hb) is expressed in the early sublineage of NB7-3, which consists of the early NB and the first GMC (GMC7-3a) and its progeny (E…

Central Nervous SystemNeuronsCell typeLineage (genetic)biologyStem CellsGene ExpressionAnatomyCell fate determinationbiology.organism_classificationCell biologyDNA-Binding ProteinsDrosophila melanogasterNeuroblastMutagenesisVentral nerve cordAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsCell LineageStem cellDrosophila melanogasterMolecular BiologyDrosophila ProteinDevelopmental BiologyTranscription FactorsDevelopment (Cambridge, England)
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Successive specification ofDrosophilaneuroblasts NB 6-4 and NB 7-3 depends on interaction of the segment polarity geneswingless,gooseberryandnaked cu…

2001

The Drosophila central nervous system derives from neural precursor cells, the neuroblasts (NBs), which are born from the neuroectoderm by the process of delamination. Each NB has a unique identity, which is revealed by the production of a characteristic cell lineage and a specific set of molecular markers it expresses. These NBs delaminate at different but reproducible time points during neurogenesis (S1-S5) and it has been shown for early delaminating NBs (S1/S2) that their identities depend on positional information conferred by segment polarity genes and dorsoventral patterning genes. We have studied mechanisms leading to the fate specification of a set of late delaminating neuroblasts,…

Central Nervous SystemTime FactorsCellular differentiationWnt1 ProteinBiologyCell fate determinationNeuroblastProto-Oncogene ProteinsAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsHedgehog ProteinsMolecular BiologyBody PatterningHomeodomain ProteinsNeuronsGeneticsNeuroectodermStem CellsNeurogenesisNuclear ProteinsCell DifferentiationengrailedCell biologyDNA-Binding ProteinsNaked cuticleDrosophila melanogasterSegment polarity geneembryonic structuresTrans-ActivatorsInsect ProteinsTranscription FactorsDevelopmental BiologyDevelopment
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Differential effects of EGF receptor signalling on neuroblast lineages along the dorsoventral axis of the Drosophila CNS

1998

ABSTRACT The Drosophila ventral nerve cord derives from a stereotype population of about 30 neural stem cells, the neuroblasts, per hemineuromere. Previous experiments provided indications for inductive signals at ventral sites of the neuroectoderm that confer neuroblast identities. Using cell lineage analysis, molecular markers and cell transplantation, we show here that EGF receptor signalling plays an instructive role in CNS patterning and exerts differential effects on dorsoventral subpopulations of neuroblasts. The Drosophila EGF receptor (DER) is capable of cell autonomously specifiying medial and intermediate neuroblast cell fates. DER signalling appears to be most critical for prope…

Central Nervous Systemanimal structuresPopulationCell fate determinationBiologyNeuroblastEctodermAnimalseducationReceptorMolecular BiologyBody PatterningNeuronseducation.field_of_studyNeuroectodermStem CellsfungiAnatomyNeural stem cellCell biologyErbB Receptorsnervous systemVentral nerve cordMutationembryonic structuresDrosophilaGanglion mother cellBiomarkersSignal TransductionStem Cell TransplantationDevelopmental BiologyDevelopment
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