995 resultados para Drosophila paulistorum complex
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Antibodies to specific nucleic acid conformations are amongst the methods that have allowed the study of non-canonical (Watson-Crick) DNA structures in higher organisms. In this work, the structural limitations for the immunological detection of DNA.RNA hybrid duplexes were examined using specific RNA homopolymers as probes for homopolymer polydeoxyadenylic acid (poly(dA)).polydeoxythymidylic acid (poly(dT))-rich regions of Rhynchosciara americana (Diptera: Sciaridae) chromosomes. Anti-DNA.RNA duplexes did not react with the complex formed between chromosomal poly(dA) and exogenous polyuridylic acid (poly(rU)). Additionally, poly(rU) prevented the detection of polyadenylic acid.poly(dT) hybrid duplexes preformed in situ. These results raised the possibility that three-stranded structures rather than duplexes were formed in chromosomal sites. To test this hypothesis, the specificity of antibodies to triple-helical nucleic acids was reassessed employing distinct nucleic acid configurations. These antibodies were raised to the poly(dA).poly(rU).poly(rU) complex and have been used here for the first time in immunocytochemistry. Anti-triplex antibodies recognised the complex poly(dA).poly(rU).poly(rU) assembled with poly(rU) in poly(dA).poly(dT)-rich homopolymer regions of R. americana chromosomes. The antibodies could not detect short triplex stretches, suggesting the existence of constraints for triple-helix detection, probably related to triplex tract length. In addition, anti-poly(dA).poly(rU).poly(rU) antibodies reacted with the pericentric heterochromatin of RNase-treated polytene chromosomes of R. americana and Drosophila melanogaster. In apparent agreement with data obtained in cell types from other organisms, the results of this work suggest that significant triple-helix DNA extensions can be formed in pericentric regions of these species.
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In metazoans, bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPS) direct a myriad of developmental and adult homeostatic evens through their heterotetrameric type I and type II receptor complexes. We examined 3 existing and 12 newly generated mutations in the Drosophila type I receptor gene, saxophone (sax), the ortholog of the human Activin Receptor-Like. Kinasel and -2 (ALK1/ACVR1 and ALK2/ACVR1) genes. Our genetic analyses identified two distinct classes of sax alleles. The first class consists of homozygous viable gain-of-function (GOF) alleles that exhibit (1) synthetic lethality in combination with mutations in BMP pathway components, and (2) significant maternal effect lethality that can be rescued by an increased dosage of the BMP encoding gene, dpp(+). In contrast, the second class consists of alleles that are recessive lethal and do not exhibit lethality in combination with mutations in other BMP pathway components. The alleles in this second class are clearly loss-of-function (LOF) with both complete and partial loss-of-function mutations represented. We find that one allele in the second class of recessive lethals exhibits dominant-negative behavior, albeit distinct from the GOF activity of the first class of viable alleles. On the basis of the fact that the first class of viable alleles can be reverted to lethality and on our ability to independently generate recessive lethal sat mutations, our analysis demonstrates that sax is an essential gene. Consistent with this conclusion, we find that a normal sax transcript is produced by sax(P), a viable allele previously reported to be mill, and that this allele can be reverted to lethality. Interestingly, we determine that two mutations in the first: class of sax alleles show the same amino acid substitutions as mutations in the human receptors ALK1/ACVR1-1 and ACVR1/ALK2, responsible for cases of hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia type 2 (HHT2) and fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP), respectively. Finally, the data presented here identify different functional requirements for the Sax receptor, support the proposal that Sax participates in a heteromeric receptor complex, and provide a mechanistic framework for future investigations into disease states that arise from defects in BMP/TGF-beta signaling.
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Considerando a importância do comportamento meiótico e da recombinação para regular os níveis de variabilidade genética, realizamos o primeiro estudo sobre a meiose masculina e feminina de seis membros do grupo da Drosophila willistoni, um dos mais representativos da família Drosophilidae na região Neotropical. Como ponto de partida, foi necessário padronizar condições técnicas para tal, adaptando protocolos pré-existentes e estabelecidos por outros autores para espécies procedentes do Hemisfério Norte, como a cosmopolita Drosophila melanogaster e a D. ananassae. A qualidade dos preparados e a resolução por nós encontradas para as espécies do grupo willistoni, foi muito superior às obtidas para D. melanogaster, sendo comparável com a excelência das figuras meióticas propiciadas pela D. ananassae. Apesar do baixo número de células em divisão (cerca de 45% dos machos, em média) detectadas, conseguimos caracterizar as fases da divisão meiótica em primórdios das gônadas de larvas macho de D. willistoni e o padrão de sinapse do par sexual e dos autossomos. Inicialmente, foi realizada a análise de duas diferentes populações, cuja prole apresenta sinais de instabilidade genética (como hipermutabilidade e atrofia gonadal), sob condições de cultivo em temperaturas fisiológica e restritiva. Em machos de ambas as linhagens (exceto em uma delas, onde observou-se um indivíduo aneuplóide XO), e nos machos da primeira geração de cruzamento entre as duas populações, não foram observadas irregularidades meióticas nem aberrações cromossômicas, tanto sob temperatura fisiológica, quanto restritiva. Análise posterior da população híbrida, mantida em laboratório, entretanto, permitiu a detecção de quebras, de pontes anafásicas, e de figuras compatíveis com quiasmas no segundo par cromossômico No braço esquerdo do cromossomo II (o chamado IIL) nesta população híbrida, segregam três inversões, a IILF (sub-terminal) e as inversões IILD+E, (na região mediana). Analisando paralelamente as configurações dos cromossomos politênicos interfásicos das glândulas salivares larvais e os meióticos dos primórdios das gônadas de cada larva macho individualmente, observou-se que sempre que ocorreram pontes anafásicas, os indivíduos eram heterozigotos para pelo menos a inversão IILF, e que as quebras detectadas no segundo cromossomo ocorreram na região subterminal de um dos braços. Estes achados fazem supor que nestes machos, estaria havendo recombinação dentro da alça de inversão formada em heterozigotos para a inversão IILF, o que necessita ser testado através de dados genéticos, em estudos futuros. Em machos de uma população natural desta espécie, também observou-se figuras compatíveis com quiasmas na parte terminal do mesmo braço esquerdo do segundo cromossomo, onde segrega a inversão IILH. Já a meiose de machos de uma população de cada uma das espécies crípticas D. paulistorum, D. tropicalis, D. equinoxialis, D. insularis e da não críptica D. nebulosa, mostrou-se regular, não sendo encontradas evidências de não-disjunções, quebras e pontes anafásicas, como em D. willistoni, apesar de todas elas apresentarem polimorfismo cromossômico para inversões paracêntricas (embora menor). O estudo futuro de novas populações deverá esclarecer se a D. willistoni suporta ou não, maiores níveis de recombinação em machos do que as outras espécies, e se estes achados podem ser interpretados como uma estratégia da D. willistoni (considerada como ancestral às outras) para manter altos níveis de polimorfismo, sem perdas gaméticas importantes, nem comprometimento da estabilidade de seu sistema genético A meiose de fêmeas de Drosophila willistoni e de D. paulistorum também foi caracterizada em linhagens igualmente polimórficas, de ambas as espécies. A detecção citológica de recombinação, entretanto, não foi possível, devido à peculiaridade dos cromossomos de oócitos, de assumirem a forma de cariossomo, altamente compactada justo nas fases de prófase I.
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We analyzed the ITS-1 spacer region of the rDNA in Drosophila mulleri and D. arizonae, two sibling species belonging to the mulleri complex (repleta group) and in hybrids obtained in both cross directions. In spite of several previous studies showing the incompatibility of crosses involving D. arizonae females and D. mulleri males, we were able to obtain hybrids in this direction. Complete ITS-1 region was amplified using primers with homology at the 3'-end of the 18S rDNA and the 5'-end of the 5.8S rDNA genes. Our data demonstrated that D. mulleri and D. arizonae can be differentiated as they present a difference in length for the ITS-1 region. The amplified fragment for this region in D. mulleri has a length of 600 bp, whereas in D. arizonae this fragment is about 500 bp. It was also observed that male and female hybrids obtained in both cross directions present two amplified fragments, confirming the location of the ribosomal cistrons in the X chromosomes and microchromosomes of both parental species.
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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In Anastrepha sp.2 aff. fraterculus, the egg-cell harbours a large population of endosymbionts. The bacteria were identified as belonging to genus Wolbachia by PCR assay using primers of the ftsZ gene followed by sequencing of the amplified band. Newly deposited eggs stained in toto by Hoechst show that the bacteria are unevenly dispersed throughout the egg-cell, with a higher accumulation at the posterior pole, and that the degree of infestation varies from egg to egg. Analysis by transmission electron microscopy shows that bacteria are present in the female germ line of embryonic and larval stages, as well as in the different cell types of the ovaries at the adult stage. Mature ova within the follicles harbour a large population of the symbionts. The results indicate the existence of a transovarian transmission of the endosymbionts in this fly.
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Drosophila mulleri (MU) and D. arizonae (AR) are cryptic species of the mulleri complex, mulleri subgroup, repleta group. Earlier cytogenetic studies revealed that these species have different regulatory mechanisms of nucleolar organizing activity. In these species, nucleolar organizing regions are found in both the X chromosome and the microchromosome. In the salivary glands of hybrids between MU females and AR males, there is an interspecific dominance of the regulatory system of the D. arizonae nucleolar organizer involving, in males, amplification and activation of the nucleolar organizer from the microchromosome. The authors who reported these findings obtained hybrids only in that cross-direction. More recently, hybrids in the opposite direction, i.e., between MU males and AR females, have been obtained. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate, in these hybrids, the association of the nucleoli with the chromosomes inherited from parental species in order to cytogenetically confirm the dominance patterns previously described. Our results support the proposed dominance of the AR nucleolar organizer activity over that of MU, regardless of cross-direction. ©FUNPEC-RP.
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Abstract Background The sequencing of the D.melanogaster genome revealed an unexpected small number of genes (~ 14,000) indicating that mechanisms acting on generation of transcript diversity must have played a major role in the evolution of complex metazoans. Among the most extensively used mechanisms that accounts for this diversity is alternative splicing. It is estimated that over 40% of Drosophila protein-coding genes contain one or more alternative exons. A recent transcription map of the Drosophila embryogenesis indicates that 30% of the transcribed regions are unannotated, and that 1/3 of this is estimated as missed or alternative exons of previously characterized protein-coding genes. Therefore, the identification of the variety of expressed transcripts depends on experimental data for its final validation and is continuously being performed using different approaches. We applied the Open Reading Frame Expressed Sequence Tags (ORESTES) methodology, which is capable of generating cDNA data from the central portion of rare transcripts, in order to investigate the presence of hitherto unnanotated regions of Drosophila transcriptome. Results Bioinformatic analysis of 1,303 Drosophila ORESTES clusters identified 68 sequences derived from unannotated regions in the current Drosophila genome version (4.3). Of these, a set of 38 was analysed by polyA+ northern blot hybridization, validating 17 (50%) new exons of low abundance transcripts. For one of these ESTs, we obtained the cDNA encompassing the complete coding sequence of a new serine protease, named SP212. The SP212 gene is part of a serine protease gene cluster located in the chromosome region 88A12-B1. This cluster includes the predicted genes CG9631, CG9649 and CG31326, which were previously identified as up-regulated after immune challenges in genomic-scale microarray analysis. In agreement with the proposal that this locus is co-regulated in response to microorganisms infection, we show here that SP212 is also up-regulated upon injury. Conclusion Using the ORESTES methodology we identified 17 novel exons from low abundance Drosophila transcripts, and through a PCR approach the complete CDS of one of these transcripts was defined. Our results show that the computational identification and manual inspection are not sufficient to annotate a genome in the absence of experimentally derived data.
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Cardiac morphogenesis is a complex process governed by evolutionarily conserved transcription factors and signaling molecules. The Drosophila cardiac tube is linear, made of 52 pairs of cardiomyocytes (CMs), which express specific transcription factor genes that have human homologues implicated in Congenital Heart Diseases (CHDs) (NKX2-5, GATA4 and TBX5). The Drosophila cardiac tube is linear and composed of a rostral portion named aorta and a caudal one called heart, distinguished by morphological and functional differences controlled by Hox genes, key regulators of axial patterning. Overexpression and inactivation of the Hox gene abdominal-A (abd-A), which is expressed exclusively in the heart, revealed that abd-A controls heart identity. The aim of our work is to isolate the heart-specific cisregulatory sequences of abd-A direct target genes, the realizator genes granting heart identity. In each segment of the heart, four pairs of cardiomyocytes (CMs) express tinman (tin), homologous to NKX2-5, and acquire strong contractile and automatic rhythmic activities. By tyramide amplified FISH, we found that seven genes, encoding ion channels, pumps or transporters, are specifically expressed in the Tin-CMs of the heart. We initially used online available tools to identify their heart-specific cisregutatory modules by looking for Conserved Non-coding Sequences containing clusters of binding sites for various cardiac transcription factors, including Hox proteins. Based on these data we generated several reporter gene constructs and transgenic embryos, but none of them showed reporter gene expression in the heart. In order to identify additional abd-A target genes, we performed microarray experiments comparing the transcriptomes of aorta versus heart and identified 144 genes overexpressed in the heart. In order to find the heart-specific cis-regulatory regions of these target genes we developed a new bioinformatic approach where prediction is based on pattern matching and ordered statistics. We first retrieved Conserved Noncoding Sequences from the alignment between the D.melanogaster and D.pseudobscura genomes. We scored for combinations of conserved occurrences of ABD-A, ABD-B, TIN, PNR, dMEF2, MADS box, T-box and E-box sites and we ranked these results based on two independent strategies. On one hand we ranked the putative cis-regulatory sequences according to best scored ABD-A biding sites, on the other hand we scored according to conservation of binding sites. We integrated and ranked again the two lists obtained independently to produce a final rank. We generated nGFP reporter construct flies for in vivo validation. We identified three 1kblong heart-specific enhancers. By in vivo and in vitro experiments we are determining whether they are direct abd-A targets, demonstrating the role of a Hox gene in the realization of heart identity. The identified abd-A direct target genes may be targets also of the NKX2-5, GATA4 and/or TBX5 homologues tin, pannier and Doc genes, respectively. The identification of sequences coregulated by a Hox protein and the homologues of transcription factors causing CHDs, will provide a mean to test whether these factors function as Hox cofactors granting cardiac specificity to Hox proteins, increasing our knowledge on the molecular mechanisms underlying CHDs. Finally, it may be investigated whether these Hox targets are involved in CHDs.
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The horizontal and vertical system neurons (HS and VS cells) are part of a conserved set of lobula plate giant neurons (LPGNs) in the optic lobes of the adult brain. Structure and physiology of these cells are well known, predominantly from studies in larger Dipteran flies. Our knowledge about the ontogeny of these cells is limited and stems predominantly from laser ablation studies in larvae of the house fly Musca domestica. These studies suggested that the HS and VS cells stem from a single precursor, which, at least in Musca, has not yet divided in the second larval instar. A regulatory mutation (In(1)omb[H31]) in the Drosophila gene optomotor-blind (omb) leads to the selective loss of the adult HS and VS cells. This mutation causes a transient reduction in omb expression in what appears to be the entire optic lobe anlage (OLA) late in embryogenesis. Here, I have reinitiated the laser approach with the goal of identifying the presumptive embryonic HS/VS precursor cell in Drosophila. The usefulness of the laser ablation approach which has not been applied, so far, to cells lying deep within the Drosophila embryo, was first tested on two well defined embryonic sensory structures, the olfactory antenno-maxillary complex (AMC) and the light-sensitive Bolwing´s organ (BO). In the case of the AMC, the efficiency of the ablation procedure was demonstrated with a behavioral assay. When both AMCs were ablated, the response to an attractive odour (n-butanol) was clearly reduced. Interestingly, the larvae were not completely unresponsive but had a delayed response kinetics, indicating the existence of a second odour system. BO will be a useful test system for the selectivity of laser ablation when used at higher spatial resolution. An omb-Gal4 enhancer trap line was used to visualize the embryonic OLA by GFP fluorescence. This fluorescence allowed to guide the laser beam to the relevant structure within the embryo. The success of the ablations was monitored in the adult brain via the enhancer trap insertion A122 which selectively visualizes the HS and VS cell bodies. Due to their tight clustering, individual cells could not be identified in the embryonic OLA by conventional fluorescence microscopy. Nonetheless, systematic ablation of subdomains of the OLA allowed to localize the presumptive HS/VS precursor to a small area within the OLA, encompassing around 10 cells. Future studies at higher resolution should be able to identify the precursor as (an) individual cell(s). Most known lethal omb alleles do not complement the HS/VS phenotype of the In(1)omb[H31] allele. This is the expected behaviour of null alleles. Two lethal omb alleles that had been isolated previously by non-complementation of the omb hypomorphic allele bifid, have been reported, however, to complement In(1)omb[H31]. This report was based on low resolution paraffin histology of adult heads. Four mutations from this mutagenesis were characterized here in more detail (l(1)omb[11], l(1)omb[12], l(1)omb[13], and l(1)omb[15]). Using A122 as marker for the adult HS and VS cells, I could show, that only l(1)omb[11] can partly complement the HS/VS cell phenotype of In(1)omb[H31]. In order to identify the molecular lesions in these mutants, the exons and exon/intron junctions were sequenced in PCR-amplified material from heterozygous flies. Only in two mutants could the molecular cause for loss of omb function be identified: in l(1)omb[13]), a missense mutation causes the exchange of a highly conserved residue within the DNA-binding T-domain; in l(1)omb[15]), a nonsense mutation causes a C-terminal truncation. In the other two mutants apparently regulatory regions or not yet identified alternative exons are affected. To see whether mutant OMB protein in the missense mutant l(1)omb[13] is affected in DNA binding, electrophoretic shift assays on wildtype and mutant T-domains were performed. They revealed that the mutant no longer is able to bind the consensus palindromic T-box element.
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The nervous system is the most complex organ in animals and the ordered interconnection of neurons is an essential prerequisite for normal behaviour. Neuronal connectivity requires controlled neuronal growth and differentiation. Neuronal growth essentially depends on the actin and microtubule cytoskeleton, and it has become increasingly clear, that crosslinking of these cytoskeletal fractions is a crucial regulatory process. The Drosophila Spectraplakin family member Short stop (Shot) is such a crosslinker and is crucial for several aspects of neuronal growth. Shot comprises various domains: An actin binding domain, a plakin-like domain, a rod domain, calcium responsive EF-hand motifs, a microtubule binding Gas2 domain, a GSR motif and a C-terminal EB1aff domain. Amongst other phenotypes, shot mutant animals exhibit severely reduced dendrites and neuromuscular junctions, the subcellular compartmentalisation of the transmembrane protein Fasciclin2 is affected, but it is also crucially required in other tissues, for example for the integrity of tendon cells, specialised epidermal cells which anchor muscles to the body wall. Despite these striking phenotypes, Shot function is little understood, and especially we do not understand how it can carry out functions as diverse as those described above. To bridge this gap, I capitalised on the genetic possibilities of the model system Drosophila melanogaster and carried out a structure-function analysis in different neurodevelopmental contexts and in tendon cells. To this end, I used targeted gene expression of existing and newly generated Shot deletion constructs in Drosophila embryos and larvae, analyses of different shot mutant alleles, and transfection of Shot constructs into S2 cells or cultured fibroblasts. My analyses reveal that a part of the Shot C-terminus is not essential in the nervous system but in tendon cells where it stabilises microtubules. The precise molecular mechanism underlying this activity is not yet elucidated but, based on the findings presented here, I have developed three alternative testable hypothesis. Thus, either binding of the microtubule plus-end tracking molecule EB1 through an EB1aff domain, microtubulebundling through a GSR rich motif or a combination of both may explain a context-specific requirement of the Shot C-terminus for tendon cell integrity. Furthermore, I find that the calcium binding EF-hand motif in Shot is exclusively required for a subset of neuronal functions of Shot but not in the epidermal tendon cells. These findings pave the way for complementary studies studying the impact of [Ca2+] on Shot function. Besides these differential requirements of Shot domains I find, that most Shot domains are required in the nervous system and tendon cells alike. Thus the microtubule Gas2 domain shows no context specific requirements and is equally essential in all analysed cellular contexts. Furthermore, I could demonstrate a partial requirement of the large spectrin-repeat rod domain of Shot in neuronal and epidermal contexts. I demonstrate that this domain is partially required in processes involving growth and/or tissue stability but dispensable for cellular processes where no mechanical stress resistance is required. In addition, I demonstrate that the CH1 domain a part of the N-terminal actin binding domain of Shot is only partially required for all analysed contexts. Thus, I conclude that Shot domains are functioning different in various cellular environments. In addition my study lays the base for future projects, such as the elucidation of Shot function in growth cones. Given the high degree of conservation between Shot and its mammalian orthologues MACF1/ACF7 and BPAG1, I believe that the findings presented in this study will contribute to the general understanding of spectraplakins across species borders.
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In Vertebraten und Insekten ist während der frühen Entwicklung des zentralen Nervensystems (ZNS), welches sich aus dem Gehirn und dem ventralen Nervensystem (VNS) zusammensetzt, die Unterteilung des Neuroektoderms (NE) in diskrete Genexpressions-Domänen entscheidend für die korrekte Spezifizierung neuraler Stammzellen. In Drosophila wird die Identität dieser Stammzellen (Neuroblasten, NB) festgelegt durch die positionellen Informationen, welche von den Produkten früher Musterbildungsgene bereitgestellt werden und das Neuroektoderm in anteroposteriorer (AP) und dorsoventraler (DV) Achse unterteilen. Die molekulargenetischen Mechanismen, welche der DV-Regionalisierung zugrunde liegen, wurden ausführlich im embryonalen VNS untersucht, sind für das Gehirn jedoch weitestgehend unverstanden. rnIm Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden neue Erkenntnisse bezüglich der genetischen Mechanismen gewonnen, welche die frühembryonale Anlage des Gehirns in DV-Achse unterteilen. So konnte gezeigt werden, dass das cephale Lückengen empty spiracles (ems), das Segmentpolaritätsgen engrailed (en), sowie der „Epidermal growth factor receptor“ (EGFR) und das Gen Nk6 homeobox (Nkx6) für Faktoren codieren, die als zentrale Regulatoren die DV Musterbildung in der Gehirnanlage kontrollieren. Diese Faktoren interagieren zusammen mit den ebenso evolutionär konservierten Homöobox-Genen ventral nervous system defective (vnd), intermediate neuroblasts defective (ind) und muscle segment homeobox (msh) in einem komplexen, regulatorischen DV-Netzwerk. Die im Trito (TC)- und Deutocerebrum (DC) entschlüsselten genetischen Interaktionen basieren überwiegend auf wechselseitiger Repression. Dementsprechend sorgen 1) Vnd und Ems durch gegenseitige Repression für eine frühe DV-Unterteilung des NE, und 2) wechselseitige Repression zwischen Nkx6 und Msh, als auch zwischen Ind und Msh für die Aufrechterhaltung der Grenze zwischen intermediärem und dorsalem NE. 3) Sowohl Ind als auch Msh sind in der Lage, die Expression von vnd zu inhibieren. Ferner konnte gezeigt werden, dass Vnd durch Repression von Msh als positiver Regulator von Nkx6 fungiert. Überdies beeinflusst Vnd die Expression von ind in segment-spezifischer Art und Weise: Vnd reprimiert ind-Expression im TC, sorgt jedoch für eine positive Regulation von ind im DC durch Repression von Msh. Auch der EGFR-Signalweg ist an der frühen DV-Regionalisierung des Gehirns beteiligt, indem er durch positive Regulation der msh-Repressoren Vnd, Ind und Nkx6 dazu beiträgt, dass die Expression von msh auf dorsales NE beschränkt bleibt. Ferner stellte sich heraus, dass das AP-Musterbildungsgen ems die Expression der DV-Gene kontrolliert und umgekehrt: Ems ist für die Aktivierung von Nkx6, ind und msh in TC und DC erforderlich ist, während Nkx6 und Ind zu einem späteren Zeitpunkt benötigt werden, um ems im intermediären DC gemeinsam zu reprimieren. Überdies konnte gezeigt werden, dass das Segmentpolaritätsgen en Aspekte der Expression von vnd, ind und msh in segment-spezifischer Art und Weise reguliert. En reprimiert ind und msh, hält jedoch vnd-Expression im DC aufrecht; im TC wird En benötigt, um die Expression von Msh herunter zu regulieren und somit die Aktivierung von ind dort zu ermöglichen.rnrnZusammengenommen zeigen diese Ergebnisse, dass AP Musterbildungsfaktoren in umfangreichen Maß die Expression der DV Gene im Gehirn (und VNS) kontrollieren. Ferner deuten diese Daten darauf hin, dass sich das „Konzept der ventralen Dominanz“, welches für die DV-Musterbildung im VNS postuliert wurde, nicht auf das genregulatorische Netzwerk im Gehirn übertragen lässt, da Interaktionen zwischen den beteiligten Faktoren hauptsächlich auf wechselseitiger (und nicht einseitiger) Repression basieren. Zudem scheint das Konzept der ventralen Dominanz auch für das VNS nicht uneingeschränkt zu gelten, da in dieser Arbeit u.a. gezeigt werden konnte, dass dorsal exprimiertes Msh in der Lage ist, intermediäres ind zu reprimieren. Interessanterweise ist gegenseitige Repression von Homöodomänen-Proteinen im sich entwickelnden Neuralrohr von Vertebraten weit verbreitet und darüberhinaus essenziell für den Aufbau diskreter DV-Vorläuferdomänen, und weist insofern eine große Ähnlichkeit zu den in dieser Arbeit beschriebenen DV-Musterbildungsvorgängen im frühembryonalen Fliegengehirn auf.rn