Fig. 7. Chn can bind to the DC enhancer in vitro, and model for the genetic control
of macrochaeta SOP singling out. (A) Scheme of the subfragments of the AS1.4DC
enhancer (thin lines under the AS1.4DC thick line) that were assayed for
binding by a polypeptide containing the five zinc fingers motifs of Chn
(Chn5ZF). A, AvaII; B, BglII; P, PstI; S,
SalI: Only the DC6 fragment (in red) was bound by Chn5ZF in an EMSA
assay, as shown in (B). A polypeptide with the five zinc fingers motifs of Chn
(Chn5ZF) binds to the 32P-labeled DC6 DNA probe in an EMSA assay.
(1) 32P-labeled DC6 DNA probe alone; (2) labeled DC6 with Chn5ZF
present; (3) labeled DC6 with Chn5ZF and an 8-fold molar ratio of cold DC6
added; (4) labeled DC6 with Chn5ZF and an 8-fold molar ratio of cold control
DNA (subfragment DC1) added. (C) A 0.5 kb fragment of the DC enhancer
(PB0.5DC, panel A) directs lacZ expression only in the posterior DC
SOP (García-García et al.,
1999). (D) Overexpression of UAS-chn (C765-Gal4)
promotes expression in many cells of the posterior notum DC region. (E) A
combination of prepattern factors (PFs) acting on an ASC proneural cluster
enhancer (PE) activate sc expression. The Dl/N signaling pathway,
activated by Sc in the proneural clusters, blocks the SOP-specific enhancer
(Artavanis-Tsakonas et al.,
1995; Culí and
Modolell, 1998; Giagtzoglou et
al., 2003). An idealized representation of Sc accumulation in the
proneural cluster is shown at the bottom of the panel. (F) Sc activates
chn. This activation might be direct and mediated by E-boxes present
in the chn gene. Chn binds to the PE and further stimulates
sc expression, leading to higher accumulation of this protein, and
also of Ac (data not shown). The ac/sc-chn stimulatory loop is
established. Dl/N signaling still blocks the SOP-specific enhancer. (G) In a
poorly understood process, a cell with high levels of Sc accumulation, and
helped by the EGFR signaling pathway that is also activated by Sc
(Culí et al., 2001),
establishes a Sc self-stimulatory loop that is mediated by the SOP-specific
enhancer (Culí and Modolell,
1998; Giagtzoglou et al.,
2003). This cell accumulates much Sc, Ac and Sens and becomes the
SOP. The Dl/N pathway no longer blocks the SOP enhancer in this cell, but it
does so in the neighboring cells
(Artavanis-Tsakonas et al.,
1995).