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Development ePress online publication date 10 Jan 2007
doi: 10.1242/dev.02786


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Research article

Dorsal-ventral midline signaling in the developing Drosophila eye


Atsushi Sato and Andrew Tomlinson*
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: at41{at}columbia.edu)

Boundaries between different cell types play key roles in many developmental patterning processes. They can be established by various mechanisms, and signaling between the different cell types can occur in a number of ways. One mechanism of cross-boundary signaling is controlled by the Notch (N)-modifying protein Fringe (Fng). At the Drosophila wing dorsal-ventral (D-V) border, the mechanism by which an Fng+-Fng- interface controls local N activation has been well characterized. A similar N-activating Fng+-Fng- interface has also been described at the D-V border of the fly eye, but the mechanisms that establish and regulate it are different from those in the wing. Here we describe the ventral role of the Sloppy-paired (Slp) transcription factor, and its interactions with dorsally expressed Iroquois (Iro) transcription factors in the regulation of signaling about the Fng+-Fng- interface in the developing eye. The two transcription factors are mutually repressive and initially abut at the D-V midline. However, N signaling at the interface downregulates Slp expression, and a gap opens between the two expression domains in which Serrate (Ser, an N ligand) is upregulated.







© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2007