First published online March 24, 2005
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/dev.01738
Development 132, 1895-1905 (2005)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2005
Functional analysis of the chicken
1-crystallin enhancer activity in Drosophila reveals remarkable evolutionary conservation between chicken and fly
Jorge Blanco1,
Franck Girard2,
Yusuke Kamachi3,
Hisato Kondoh3 and
Walter J. Gehring1,*
1 Department of Cell Biology, Biozentrum, University of Basel,
Klingelbergstrasse 70, CH-4056 Basel, Switzerland
2 Institut de Génétique Humaine, Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique UPR 1142, 141 rue de la Cardonille, 34396 Montpellier,
France
3 Graduate School of Frontier Biosciences, Osaka University, 1-3 Yamadaoka,
Suita, Osaka 565-0871, Japan

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Fig. 1. Functional analysis of the chicken DC5(8x) enhancer in Drosophila.
(A) Wild-type and mutant sequences of the DC5 enhancer used in this study. SOX
and PAX6 binding sites are indicated. Altered nucleotides are shown in red.
(B) Scheme of the construct used to test the functionality of the DC5 enhancer
in Drosophila. The octamerized DC5 enhancer was cloned upstream of a
minimal promoter (MP) and the EGFP reporter gene. (C-I) Activity pattern of
the DC5(8x) enhancer in the adult Drosophila head. Enhancer activity
was detected in the compound eye when the wild-type sequence was used (C). The
mutant M4 and M7 enhancers failed to drive EGFP expression (D,E), although the
transgenesis marker used (3xP3-DsRed1) was equally expressed in the three
cases (F,G,H), indicating that the chromosomal insertion point of the
different constructs did not affect enhancer functionality. (I) Enhancer
activity is also detected in the adult antenna (red arrow), the maxillary
palps (blue arrow) and the labial palps (yellow arrow). (J-L) During larval
development, the DC5(8x) enhancer is active in the eye imaginal disc (J) and
in Bolwig's organ (K,L).
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Fig. 2. The cells responsive to DC5 activity in Drosophila are the cone
cells. The activity pattern of DC5(8x) in the adult compound eye (A) and in
the larval eye imaginal disc (B) was compared with the activity pattern of the
cone-cell-specific enhancer SME (C,D). SME is the minimal eye-specific
enhancer of D-Pax2 (Flores et
al., 2000 ). Fluorescence microscopy indicates that both activity
patterns are identical, as shown in preparations of the larval eye imaginal
disc (E,F,G) and in cryosections of the adult compound eye (H,I,J). When a
signal-peptide-tagged EGFP was used as a reporter for the enhancer activity,
the fluorescence signal was detected in the lenses of the compound eye (K).
This experiment was done in a w+ genetic background to
keep the ommatidium structure unaltered (L).
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Fig. 3. Cooperative binding of the Drosophila PAX6/2 and SOX2 homologues
to the DC5 sequence in vitro. (A) Schemes of the Drosophila PAX6,
PAX2 and SOX2 homologues and their variants with different molecular tags.
DNA-binding domains are indicated: paired domain (PD), homeodomain (HD),
N-terminal portion of the homeodomain (H) and high mobility group domain
(HMG). The octapeptide sequence (O) present in D-PAX2 is also shown. (B)
Binding of the Drosophila PAX6 and SOX2 homologues to the wild-type
monomeric DC5 sequence. Five nanograms of the tagged variants of the different
proteins were used in gel mobility shift assays. (C) Comparison of the binding
affinities of D-PAX2-PD, EY-PD and TOY-PD for the monomeric DC5 sequence.
(D,E,F) Cooperative binding of Drosophila PAX6/2 and SOX2 homologues
to the wild-type monomeric DC5 sequence. Combinations of the different tagged
variants were included in the binding reaction, and their ability to
cooperatively bind to the DC5 sequence was analysed by gel mobility shift
assays. In all the cases, the results were similar. The duplex complex SOX2
homologue-DC5 (red asterisks) migrated more slowly and became more intense
upon addition of increasing amounts of the PAX6/2 homologues, giving rise to
the triple complex SOX2 homologue-PAX6/2 homologue-DC5 (blue asterisks).
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Fig. 4. Synergistic activation of the DC5(8x) enhancer in vivo. (A) Cell culture
co-transfection assays in Schneider 2 cells. Wild-type and mutant DC5
enhancers were tested for activation by exogenous Drosophila Pax6,
Pax2 and Sox2 homologues. The structure of the reporter and
effector plasmids is shown (A1). ß-gal activity of the reporter vector
co-transfected with the empty effector vector was taken as 1 (column C). (B)
Ectopic activation in Drosophila tissue. Wild-type DC5(8x) enhancer
was tested for activation in the wing imaginal disc by ectopic expression of
Drosophila Pax6, Pax2 and Sox2 homologues.
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Fig. 5. D-Pax2 and SoxN are expressed in the Drosophila
compound eye and in the eye imaginal disc. (A) Genomic map of the
SoxN locus and structure of the construct used to trace SoxN
expression. The intronless SoxN gene consists of a translated region
(TR) flanked by extensive 5' and 3' untranslated regions (5'
UTR and 3' UTR, respectively). Regulatory sequences important for
SoxN expression in the adult compound eye (B) and in the eye imaginal
disc (C) are present in the promoter and the 5' untranslated region of
SoxN (from 2939 to +869. PSoxN).
D-Pax2 expression was monitored using its minimal eye-specific
enhancer SME. This enhancer is active in the cone cells of the adult compound
eye (E) and their precursors in the eye imaginal disc (F). Comparison of both
expression patterns in the eye imaginal disc shows that they are coincident
(D,G,H).
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Fig. 6. DC5(8x) activity in the Drosophila compound eye is abolished by
depletion of either D-Pax2 or SoxN. (A) The DC5(8x) enhancer
is inactive in Drosophila spapol mutant. This mutant is
characterized by the absence of D-Pax2 expression in cone cells and
primary pigment cells. Nevertheless, cone cells do still form in
spapol mutant, as shown by means of the cone-cell-specific
enhancer SME (B). (C-F) SoxN depletion was studied using the clonal
analysis technique. Mutant clones in the adult compound eye were generated
using the strategy depicted in panel E. SoxN clones
(red arrows in C,D,F) were identified by the lack of red pigment
(w) under white illumination (C). The use of UV
light facilitated the identification of the mutant tissue (D). The activity of
the DC5(8x) enhancer is abolished in the SoxN
clones (F).
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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2005