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First published online September 7, 2009
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/dev.038422
1 Department of Genetics, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO
63110, USA.
2 Department of Biology, Saint Louis University, 3507 Laclede Ave., St Louis, MO
63103, USA.
* Author for correspondence (twolff{at}genetics.wustl.edu)
Accepted 29 July 2009
Directed cellular movements are a universal feature of morphogenesis in multicellular organisms. Differential adhesion between the stationary and motile cells promotes these cellular movements to effect spatial patterning of cells. A prominent feature of Drosophila eye development is the 90° rotational movement of the multicellular ommatidial precursors within a matrix of stationary cells. We demonstrate that the cell adhesion molecules Echinoid (Ed) and Friend of Echinoid (Fred) act throughout ommatidial rotation to modulate the degree of ommatidial precursor movement. We propose that differential levels of Ed and Fred between stationary and rotating cells at the initiation of rotation create a permissive environment for cell movement, and that uniform levels in these two populations later contribute to stopping the movement. Based on genetic data, we propose that ed and fred impart a second, independent, `brake-like' contribution to this process via Egfr signaling. Ed and Fred are localized in largely distinct and dynamic patterns throughout rotation. However, ed and fred are required in only a subset of cells - photoreceptors R1, R7 and R6 - for normal rotation, cells that have only recently been linked to a role in planar cell polarity (PCP). This work also provides the first demonstration of a requirement for cone cells in the ommatidial rotation aspect of PCP. ed and fred also genetically interact with the PCP genes, but affect only the degree-of-rotation aspect of the PCP phenotype. Significantly, we demonstrate that at least one PCP protein, Stbm, is required in R7 to control the degree of ommatidial rotation.
Key words: Drosophila eye, Egfr, Adhesion, Cell motility, Ommatidial rotation, Planar cell polarity, Tissue polarity
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J. L. Fetting, S. A. Spencer, and T. Wolff The cell adhesion molecules Echinoid and Friend of Echinoid coordinate cell adhesion and cell signaling to regulate the fidelity of ommatidial rotation in the Drosophila eye J. Cell Sci., October 1, 2009; 122(19): e1907 - e1907. [Full Text] |
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