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. 1992 May;201(3):157-168.
doi: 10.1007/BF00188714.

Expression of gooseberry-proximal in the Drosophila developing nervous system responds to cues provided by segment polarity genes

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Expression of gooseberry-proximal in the Drosophila developing nervous system responds to cues provided by segment polarity genes

Rodney J Ouellette et al. Rouxs Arch Dev Biol. 1992 May.

Abstract

Segment polarity genes define the cell states that are required for proper organization of each metameric unit of the Drosophila embryo. Among these, the gooseberry locus has been shown to be composed of two closely related genes which are expressed in an overlapping single-segment periodicity. We have used specific antibodies raised against the protein product of the gooseberry proximal (gsb-p) gene to determine the spatial distribution of this antigen in wild type embryos, and to monitor the effects of segment polarity mutants on the pattern of the gsb-p protein distribution. We find that the gsb-p protein accumulates beneath each posterior axonal commissure in the progeny of neuroblasts deriving from the epidermal compartments of wingless (wg) and engrailed (en) expression. The results of this analysis support the idea that gsb-p has a specific role in the control of cell fates during neurogenesis, and indicate that en and wg provide critical positional cues to define the domain in which gsbp will be activated. Furthermore, these data suggest that, in order to be expressed in the embryonic CNS, gsb-p may preliminarily require activity of the gooseberry-distal gene in the epidermis.

Keywords: Cell interactions; Drosophila; Pattern formation; Segment polarity genes; gooseberry.

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