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First published online 10 May 2006
doi: 10.1242/dev.02401
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Department of Zoology, University of Wisconsin, 250 North Mills Street, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: ssblair{at}wisc.edu)
Accepted 27 March 2006
| SUMMARY |
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Key words: Overgrowth, Junction, Four-jointed, Dachs, Frizzled, Grunge, Atrophin
| INTRODUCTION |
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As Ft and Ds are protocadherins (Clark
et al., 1995
; Mahoney et al.,
1991
), differences in cell adhesion have been invoked to explain
the mutant phenotypes. When homozygous mutant clones are generated in
wild-type discs, they round up and form unusually smooth boundaries with their
neighbors, consistent with a change in adhesion
(Adler et al., 1998
;
Garoia et al., 2000
). The role
of cell adhesion and junctional proteins in growth control in vertebrate cells
is well known, and in Drosophila, failures in junctional proteins
such as Discs large 1 can lead to a disc overgrowth phenotype (reviewed by
Bilder, 2004
;
Hajra and Fearon, 2002
;
Johnston and Gallant, 2002
).
It is also easy to imagine that failures in adhesion could lead to changes in
cell-cell communication, such as the signals thought to be mediated by the
core PCP proteins to transmit polarity information from cell to cell (see
Amonlirdviman et al., 2005
), or
the unknown cues that result in proper proximodistal patterning of the wing
and leg.
However, several lines of evidence have suggested an alternative
hypothesis, that Ft and Ds act partially or wholly as receptor and ligand,
respectively, in a poorly understood signaling pathway (reviewed by
Saburi and McNeill, 2005
). Ft
and Ds are unusual among members of the cadherin family, as they bind each
other in a preferentially heterophilic fashion. Each is necessary to stabilize
the other on the cell surface in imaginal discs
(Ma et al., 2003
;
Strutt and Strutt, 2002
).
Overexpression of one leads to excess accumulation of the other in vivo; in
vitro, Ds-expressing cells preferentially aggregate with Ft-expressing cells
(Matakatsu and Blair, 2004
)
(this study).
Ft is expressed in a largely uniform fashion
(Garoia et al., 2000
;
Ma et al., 2003
). Ds, however,
has spatially restricted domains and gradients of expression in the eye, wing,
leg and abdomen, suggesting that it might provide positional cues for PCP;
indeed, artificial boundaries and gradients of Ds can reorient PCP
(Adler et al., 1998
;
Casal et al., 2002
;
Ma et al., 2003
;
Matakatsu and Blair, 2004
;
Rawls et al., 2002
;
Simon, 2004
;
Strutt and Strutt, 2002
;
Yang et al., 2002
). Genetic
epistasis experiments examining PCP in the eye suggest that Ft acts downstream
of Ds (Yang et al., 2002
).
Thus, Ds may alter the activity of Ft, thereby regulating the polarity of
cells along the axis of graded Ds expression
(Fanto et al., 2003
;
Ma et al., 2003
;
Yang et al., 2002
). By
extension, Ds may similarly regulate Ft activity during growth control and
proximodistal patterning (Clark et al.,
1995
).
Such signaling may be mediated by the intracellular domains of Ft or Ds.
The extracellular domain of Ft contains 34 cadherin repeats, followed by five
EGF-like and two laminin A-G domains; the extracellular domain of Ds contains
27 cadherin repeats (Fig. 1)
(Clark et al., 1995
;
Mahoney et al., 1991
)
(reviewed by Tepass, 1999
).
Several Ft-like and Ds-like protocadherins have been identified in vertebrates
and a second `Fat-like' protocadherin has been identified in
Drosophila (also called Fat2), based on their similar arrangement of
extracellular domains (reviewed by Tanoue
and Takeichi, 2005
). Intriguingly, a subset of these, the
vertebrate proteins Fat4 (also called Fat-J), dachsous 1 (also called
protocadherin 16) and dachsous 2, are also similar to Ft and Ds in their
intracellular domains (Hong et al.,
2004
; Nakajima et al.,
2001
). Moreover, the intracellular domain of Ft can bind to the
Drosophila Atrophin protein Grunge, and grunge mutants have
PCP defects (Fanto et al.,
2003
).
But while suggestive, the evidence for signaling via Ds or Ft in PCP is not definitive. The role of Grunge is uncertain (see Discussion), and many of these results could be explained by spatially regulated changes in cell adhesion. Moreover, most of the evidence for signaling has focused on PCP, and different mechanisms might underlie growth control and proximodistal patterning.
Therefore, we have taken a structure-function approach, asking whether the various activities of Ft and Ds are mediated by their extracellular or intracellular domains. For this, we concentrated especially on two well-studied phenotypes: the strong overgrowth of ft mutant discs, and the effects of ft and ds on hair polarity in the wing and abdomen. Our results (summarized in Table 1) show that a form of Ft lacking almost the entire extracellular domain retains nearly wild-type activity in growth control and PCP, while a form of Ds that lacks the intracellular domain retained nearly wild-type activity in PCP. This is consistent with the model Ft has a receptor-like function mediated by its intracellular domain, while Ds has a ligand-like function in PCP. However, we will also present evidence suggesting that Ds can act independently of Ft in growth control, and that the intracellular domain of Ds has some activity in the proximodistal patterning of the wing. Because each assay raises separate issues, and may rely on divergent biological mechanisms, we have separated our presentation of the data below depending on the assay used.
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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|
|
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ECD, a fragment from nucleotide 1 to 412 was
amplified by PCR and fused with a fragment from nucleotide 13704 to the stop
codon; the amino acid sequence at the fusion is
QPT137-C4569RGD. The deletion thus begins within the
first cadherin domain and ends three amino acids N-terminal to the
transmembrane domain predicted by TMHMM
(Krogh et al., 2001
ICD, a fragment from nucleotide 13858 to the
stop codon was replaced with HA tag sequence, yielding a C-terminal amino acid
sequence of KQEKIG4619-YPYDVPDYAstop (HA tag
underlined). The deletion thus begins 11 amino acids C-terminal to the
transmembrane domain, removing the regions with high homology to the
intracellular domain of vertebrate Fat4.
UAS-ds (Matakatsu and Blair,
2004
) contains the entire region coding for GenBank Accession
Numbers AAA79329 and Q24292, including 20 amino acids N-terminal of the SQA-AS
signal cleavage site predicted by SignalP v.3.0
(Bendtsen et al., 2004
), but
lacks the additional N-terminal 53 amino acids of the Ds-RA prediction
(Flybase). Nucleotide positions below are from GenBank Accession Number
L08811.2 and amino acid positions are from Ds-RA (FlyBase). For
UAS-ds
ECD, a fragment from nucleotide 955 to 1225 was
ligated with a fragment from nucleotide 10033 to the stop codon; the amino
acid sequence at the fusion is RETR143-G3080 TNL. The
deletion thus begins N-terminal to the cadherin repeats and ends 17 amino
acids N-terminal to the predicted transmembrane domain. For
UAS-ds
ICD, a DNA fragment was amplified lacking
nucleotides 10198 to the stop codon, yielding a C-terminal amino acid sequence
of VKPHL3134stop. The deletion, thus, begins 14 amino acids
C-terminal to the transmembrane domain, removing the regions with high
homology to the intracellular domains of vertebrate dachsous 1 and 2.
All constructs were confirmed by sequencing and cloned between the NotI (5') and KpnI (3') sites of pUAST. Detailed information for DNA constructs is available upon request.
To determine molecular lesions for ftG-rv and ftfd, genomic DNA from heterozygote adults and homozygote larvae were used as template for PCR and the resultant products were directly sequenced.
Mutant alleles and fly strains
ftG-rv and ftfd are lethal alleles
(Bryant et al., 1988
).
ft clones were generated in y w hs-Flp;
ftG-rv FRT40A/y+
FRT40A or y w hs-Flp; ftfd
FRT40A/ubi-GFP FRT40A larvae.
ft18 (ftk07918) is a semi-lethal
allele. ds05142 (Bloomington Stock Center) and
dsUAO71 are strong alleles that lack detectable cell
surface anti-Ds staining (Adler et al.,
1998
; Matakatsu and Blair,
2004
) (data not shown). dsUAO71
ftG-rv has been described previously
(Ma et al., 2003
).
dsgal4 was isolated by mobilizing the P element in
30A-gal4, and is a strong ds allele.
Misexpression experiments used actin5C (act)-gal4,
AyGal4, daughterless (da)-gal4, engrailed
(en)-gal4; tubulin (tub)-gal4 and
UAS-GFP (Bloomington Stock Center); spalt
(sal)-gal4, hedgehog (hh)-gal4, apterous
(ap)-gal4, UAS-ds and UAS-ft
(Matakatsu and Blair, 2004
);
and the UAS stocks generated above.
In vitro studies
Transfection of S2 cells and cell aggregation assays were as described
previously (Matakatsu and Blair,
2004
).
Immunostaining and westerns
Fixation, anti-Ds and anti-Ft staining and visualization in vivo were as
described previously (Matakatsu and Blair,
2004
), with the exception that EGTA was added to the Brower fix
buffer when used for nuclear antigens. We used the following additional
primary antibodies: mouse anti-Engrailed 4F11 (1:10)
(Patel et al., 1989
), rabbit
anti-Vestigial (1:500) (Williams et al.,
1991
), rabbit anti-Distal-less (1:200)
(Panganiban et al., 1995
), rat
anti-DE-cadherin (1:20) (Oda et al.,
1994
) (Development Studies Hybridoma Bank) or goat
anti-DE-cadherin (1:500) (Santa Cruz), and rat anti-HA (1:100) (Roche) or
rabbit anti-HA (1:200) (Santa Cruz).
For western blots, protein was extracted from S2 cells or larval discs and CNS using sample buffer, run on 3-8% Tris-Acetate gels (Invitrogen), and transferred to PVDF membranes (Millipore) in transfer buffer (48 mM Tris, 390 mM glycine, 0.1% SDS, 10% methanol). Blots were stained with anti-Ft, anti-Ds (see above) or anti-HA (Santa Cruz), followed by appropriate HRP-linked secondary antisera (Jackson) and the Super Signal detection kit (Pierce).
| RESULTS |
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ECD, Ds
ECD) or intracellular (Ft
ICD,
Ds
ICD) domains (Fig. 1;
details in Materials and methods). Because the available anti-Ft antiserum was
generated to the intracellular domain
(Yang et al., 2002
ICD with a C-terminal HA tag.
To check the stability and subcellular localization of these deleted
proteins, we expressed these in imaginal discs and S2 cells using the Gal4-UAS
system (Brand and Perrimon,
1993
). For those that could be directly compared by antibody
staining (all but Ft
ICD), levels of expression were equivalent, and
well above endogenous anti-Ft or anti-Ds levels in wing discs (see Fig. S1 in
the supplementary material). However, the
ICD and
ECD proteins
had different subcellular localizations. Both Ft
ICD and Ds
ICD
were largely localized at the cell cortex
(Fig. 2B,E), similar to what we
observed previously with full-length Ft and Ds
(Fig. 2A,D)
(Matakatsu and Blair, 2004
).
By contrast, the Ft
ECD and Ds
ECD proteins were diffusely
localized, except for a few vesicle-like structures, and only very low levels
of protein were located at the cell cortex
(Fig. 2C,F; data not shown).
This is reminiscent of the mislocalization of wild-type Ft and Ds that occurs
in vivo after the loss of their Ds- or Ft-binding partners
(Ma et al., 2003
;
Strutt and Strutt, 2002
), and
thus may represent a failure in the stabilization of the
ECD proteins
at the cell surface by binding to endogenous Ds or Ft.
|
ICD and Ds
ICD constructs did retain this ability
(Fig. 2B,E). However,
misexpression of the Ft
ECD or Ds
ECD constructs in wing discs did
not result in the stabilization of endogenous Ft or Ds, respectively
(Fig. 2C,G).
To confirm that removal of the extracellular domains prevented the binding
of Ft
ECD to Ds and Ds
ECD to Ft, we checked the ability of these
constructs to mediate heterophilic cell aggregation in vitro. S2 cells
co-transfected or separately transfected with ft and ds
aggregate (Fig. 3B,F)
(Matakatsu and Blair, 2004
).
Cells co-transfected with ds
ICD and ft also
aggregated (Fig. 3C), as did
cells separately transfected with ft
ICD and
ds (Fig. 3G). Thus,
the deletions of the intracellular domains of Ft or Ds did not obviously
impair their ability to bind each other. By contrast, S2 cells co-transfected
with ds
ECD and ft or
ft
ECD and ds did not aggregate
(Fig. 3D,E).
|
UAS-ft can rescue both the disc overgrowth and pupal lethality of
ftG-rv/ftfd when driven using
act-gal4 (Fig. 4C) or
da-gal4 (see Fig. S2C,J in the supplementary material)
(Matakatsu and Blair, 2004
).
Similarly, expression of UAS-ft in the posterior of
ftG-rv/ftfd discs using
en-gal4 rescued overgrowth in a region-autonomous fashion; this assay
has the advantage that the degree of rescue can be assessed in a single disc
(Fig. 5C).
|
ECD was
nearly as effective as UAS-ft in rescuing
ftG-rv/ftfd disc overgrowth when
misexpressed using either act-gal4
(Fig. 4D), da-gal4
(see Fig. S2D,K in the supplementary material) or en-gal4
(Fig. 5D), and rescued
lethality with either act-gal4 or da-gal4. As shown above,
Ft
ECD cannot bind Ds and fails to accumulate at high levels at the cell
surface, and thus should lack any adhesive function. Nonetheless, Ft
ECD
is sufficient for growth control at the levels of expression being driven in
these experiments. This strongly suggests that the ability of Ft to control
growth is mediated, not via any putative adhesive function, but through its
intracellular domain.
Ft
ICD has dominant-negative effects on growth control
We showed above that Ft
ICD can bind to and stabilize Ds in vivo and
in vitro. However, in contrast to UAS-ft
ECD,
UAS-ft
ICD was unable to rescue either the disc overgrowth
or pupal lethality of ftG-rv/ftfd when
driven using act-gal4 (Fig.
4E, Fig. 5E). Thus,
binding to Ds is not sufficient to confer wild-type Ft activity in the absence
of the intracellular domain. This failure cannot simply be attributed to low
levels of the Ft
ICD protein, as Ft
ICD had a dominant-negative
effect on growth control, opposite to the effects of UAS-ft or
UAS-ft
ECD. The overgrowth normally observed in
ftG-rv/ftfd discs was markedly
enhanced by expressing UAS-ft
ICD with either
act-gal4 or da-gal4 [compare
Fig. 4B with
Fig. 4E and Fig. S2B,I with
Fig. S2E,L (supplementary material)]. Misexpression of
UAS-ft
ICD in otherwise wild-type wing discs also
caused a range of overgrowth phenotypes; the effect was moderate with
hh-gal4, but very strong with the stronger ap-gal4 driver
(Fig. 6B-D). Overgrowth was
largely or wholly limited to the region of misexpression, as the region
lacking misexpression was a nearly normal size (e.g. ventral with the dorsally
expressed ap-gal4; compare Fig. 6A
with 6B). This dominant-negative effect apparently depends on the
existence of an intact transmembrane domain, as misexpression of a Ft
construct lacking both the transmembrane and intracellular domains did not
cause significant overgrowth or enhance the overgrowth observed in
ftG-rv/ftfd discs; it also did not
stabilize Ds in vivo and in vitro (H.M., unpublished).
It is unlikely that Ft
ICD is acting only by interfering with the
activity of endogenous Ft, as Ft
ICD can enhance overgrowth in
ftG-rv/ftfd discs. Nonetheless, such
interference could contribute to the phenotype; for example, Ft
ICD
might titrate out some factor required for the normal stability or
localization of endogenous Ft. We therefore examined the effects of
Ft
ICD on endogenous Ft, using an antiserum that was generated against
the intracellular domain of Ft (Yang et
al., 2002
) and that does not cross-react with Ft
ICD
(Fig. 6E). We found that the
levels of endogenous Ft on the cell surface were actually increased in the
region of Ft
ICD misexpression (Fig.
6F). As the levels of endogenous ft mRNA were unchanged
by Ft
ICD misexpression (data not shown), endogenous Ft protein is
probably being stabilized by Ft
ICD, although without providing enough
Ft activity to suppress overgrowth. This stabilization is surprising given the
lack of any evidence for homophilic binding in `trans' between cells
expressing Ft (Stutt and Strutt, 2002; Ma
et al., 2003
; Matakatsu and
Blair, 2004
), and we cannot detect aggregation in vitro between
cells expressing full-length Ft and Ft
ICD (data not shown). However, it
is possible that stabilization results from `cis' dimerization between the Ft
and Ft
ICD expressed on the surface of a single cell, as has been
proposed to occur between other cadherins (e.g.
Takeda et al., 1999
).
|
|
ICD can bind and stabilize Ds
(Fig. 2B,
Fig. 3G,
Fig. 6E), another explanation
for the overgrowth is that Ft
ICD binds to Ds in a way that prevents
full Ds activity. Again, this is unlikely to be the sole mechanism, as the
overgrowth phenotype induced by Ft
ICD
(Fig. 6B) can be much stronger
than that of strong ds mutants (see below). Nonetheless, we will show
below that removal of ds also enhances the overgrowth observed in
ftG-rv/ftfd discs
(Fig. 4G, see Fig. S2G,N in the
supplementary material) in a manner similar to Ft
ICD misexpression.
Thus, Ft
ICD may bind to and block the activities of both Ds and Ft (see
Discussion).
ft mutants and Ft
ICD can disrupt growth without affecting wg or Wg targets
Recent studies have suggested that reducing the function of Ft and Ds can
lead to modulation of Wg signaling, especially in the prospective hinge region
of the wing disc, and expand the inner (distal) ring of wg expression
in the hinge (Cho and Irvine,
2004
; Rodriguez,
2004
). Moreover, it has recently been reported that ft
overexpression inhibits the expression Distal-less (Dll) and the `quadrant'
enhancer of vestigial (vg-QE), and that expression of the
vg-QE is heightened in ft- clones
(Jaiswal et al., 2006
). As
expression of vg and Dll is stimulated by Wg signaling
(Blair, 1994
;
Neumann and Cohen, 1997
),
these results raise the possibility that gains in wg or Wg signal
transduction underlie some portion of the disc overgrowth phenotype.
However, although we find that ftfd clones occasionally
lead to distortions and apparent expansions in anti-Vg and anti-Dll staining,
most clones, even those with obvious overgrowth, showed no obvious change in
staining (see Fig. S3A-D in the supplementary material). To test this in
another way, we examined the expression of Vg and Dll in two assays. In the
first, we examined ftG-rv/ftfd discs
in which overgrowth had been rescued in the posterior using en-gal4
and UAS-ft or UAS-ft
ECD
(Fig. 5). In the second we
compared the expression of Dll in wild-type regions with regions in which
overgrowth was induced by posterior misexpression of
UAS-ft
ICD, using hh-gal4
(Fig. 6C). We did not observe
convincing increases in the expression of Vg or Dll in regions of overgrowth
(Fig. 5C,D;
Fig. 6C). Posterior expression
of UAS-ft
ICD also did not obviously increase the
width of the distal ring of wg-lacZ expression in the hinge region
when compared with adjacent anterior cells
(Fig. 6D), in contrast to the
expansions observed in ft mutant clones
(Cho and Irvine, 2004
). Thus,
gains in the expression of wg or Wg targets were not reliable
correlates of overgrowth.
It was also reported that Wg signaling stimulates and Ft represses the
transcription of the Drosophila E-cadherin (DE-cadherin, also called
Shotgun) (Jaiswal et al.,
2006
). We misexpressed UAS-ft
ICD with the
strong, dorsal-specific ap-gal4 driver, and observed a slight
decrease in anti-DE-cadherin staining in the dorsal region
(Fig. 6G). This is similar to
what was reported with UAS-ft
(Jaiswal et al., 2006
),
despite the opposite effects of full length Ft and Ft
ICD on growth
control. Thus, overgrowth does not reliably correlate with gains in
DE-cadherin.
Ds contributes to growth control independently of the intracellular domain of Ft
Although weaker ds alleles do not induce obvious overgrowth
phenotypes, strong ds mutations can induce mild overgrowth phenotypes
(e.g. ds05142 or dsUAO71;
Fig. 4F, see Fig. S2F,M in the
supplementary material) (see also
Rodriguez, 2004
). This raises
the possibility that Ds regulates growth partly or wholly by binding to Ft and
regulating the activity of its intracellular domain. Alternatively, it may be
that Ds regulates growth independently of Ft.
Unfortunately, the mildness and variability of the ds mutant overgrowth made it difficult to test these alternatives using deleted Ds constructs. Instead, we tested the epistatic relationship between ds and ft in growth control, reasoning that if Ds regulated disc growth solely by regulating the activity of the intracellular domain of Ft, then removing ds should have no additional effect in the ftG-rv/ftfd mutant background. As noted above, we observed a marked enhancement of the disc overgrowth phenotype in dsUAO71 ftG-rv/dsUAO71 ftfd wing and eye-antennal discs (Fig. 4G, see Fig. S2G,N in the supplementary material). Thus, Ds must have some growth control activity that is not mediated by the intracellular domain of Ft.
The intracellular domain of Ft is sufficient for PCP
Uniform expression of UAS-ft with act-gal4 or
da-gal4 (data not shown) not only rescued the viability of
ftG-rv/ftfd flies, but produced wings
with largely normal PCP in distal regions; defects were largely limited to the
region proximal and anterior to the ACV
(Fig. 7D, see Fig. S4I,J in the
supplementary material). Nearly identical results were obtained using
act-gal4 and UAS-ft
ECD
(Fig. 7E, see Fig. S4K,L in the
supplementary material). The normal PCP in the distal wing probably
constitutes rescue of the mutant state. Although
ftG-rv/ftfd flies do not survive to
produce adult wings, and the morphology of the mutant wings is too disrupted
to assess PCP at pupal or pharate stages, homozygous
ftG-rv or ftfd clones disrupt PCP in a
central region (Ma et al.,
2003
; Strutt and Strutt,
2002
) that extends into the distal wing (distal L2-L3 intervein;
Fig. 7C). The weaker viable
ft18 mutation also produces PCP defects that extend distal
to the PCV (Fig. 7B).
|
ECD (Fig.
7L) using act-gal4. Thus, a form of Ft that cannot bind
Ds can substantially rescue PCP.
The severe overgrowth and early larval-pupal lethality induced by
UAS-ft
ICD in
ftG-rv/ftfd flies prevented us from assessing
the rescuing ability of Ft
ICD in either the wing or abdomen PCP assays.
Therefore, as a final test of the PCP activities of deleted Ft constructs, we
made use of the fact that expression of UAS-ft can disrupt PCP in
wild-type wings (Matakatsu and Blair,
2004
). Expression of UAS-ft, UAS-ft
ECD or
UAS-ft
ICD with act-gal4 all caused mild
perturbation of PCP in the wing (Fig.
7F-H, see Fig. S4C-H in the supplementary material). Similar
effects were observed in abdomens (data not shown). As this assay does not
allow us to distinguish whether the defects were being caused by gains or
losses in Ft activity, we do not know whether Ft
ICD is having the same
dominant-negative effects on PCP that it has on growth control.
The extracellular domain of Ds is sufficient for wing PCP
Strong ds mutants, such as ds05142, survive
and produce adult wings with widespread, characteristic PCP defects
(Fig. 8B)
(Adler et al., 1998
). Uniform
misexpression of UAS-ds with tub-gal4 can rescue the PCP
defect in all but the most proximal regions of the wing blade
(Fig. 8C)
(Matakatsu and Blair, 2004
),
and expression using ds-gal4 partially rescued PCP in the proximal
wing (Fig. S5D). Nearly identical rescue of PCP was obtained using
UAS-ds
ICD and tub-gal4
(Fig. 8D) or ds-gal4
(see Fig. S5E in the supplementary material). Thus, the extracellular domain
of Ds is sufficient to drive normal PCP. By contrast, driving
UAS-ds
ECD using ds-gal4 did not obviously
rescue the PCP phenotype (see Fig. S5F in the supplementary material) (driving
UAS-ds
ECD in ds05142 mutants
using tub-gal4 caused lethality before PCP could be assessed). These
results are consistent with the model that Ds acts chiefly as a ligand for Ft
in PCP.
To further compare the effects of Ds
ICD and Ds
ECD on PCP, we
drove expression in wild type flies. We showed previously that wing hairs
reorient away from regions of high ds misexpression [e.g. after
misexpression in a gradient orthogonal to the proximodistal axis of the wing
using sal-gal4 (Fig.
8J)] distally (using dll-gal4) or posteriorly (using
en-gal4) (Matakatsu and Blair,
2004
). Driving misexpression of UAS-ds
ICD
with sal-gal4, dll-gal4 or en-gal4 also caused hairs to
point away from the region of misexpression
(Fig. 8K and data not shown).
By contrast, patterned misexpression of UAS-ds
ECD did
not cause any change in wing PCP (en-gal4,
Fig. 8H; sal-gal4,
Fig. 8L; dll-gal4, ap-gal4,
tub-gal4; data not shown). Thus, the intracellular domain of Ds does not
have any detectable activity in PCP in the absence of the extracellular
domain, despite being driven at levels in excess of the endogenous protein
(see Fig. S1E in the supplementary material). Again, this is consistent with
the model that Ds acts chiefly as a ligand in this process.
|
ECD showed no activity in PCP, it did show biological
activity in a third phenotype common to ft and ds mutants:
the alteration of proximodistal wing blade patterning. Adult wings from
ds and weaker ft alleles are foreshortened along the
proximodistal axis of the wing blade, as indicated by the abnormally close
proximity between the anterior crossvein (ACV) and the posterior crossvein
(PCV); with stronger alleles, regions of one or both crossveins are lost
(Fig. 7B,
Fig. 8B). We have as yet been
unable to rescue the crossvein spacing defects of ft or ds
mutants using full-length Ft or Ds (Fig.
7D, Fig. 8C; data
not shown). In fact, overexpression of full-length Ft or Ds in wild-type flies
produced a crossvein spacing defect that resembled the mutant phenotype
(Fig. 7F,
Fig. 8E). This suggests that
the normal spacing between the crossveins requires a precise level or pattern
of Ft and Ds that we were unable to reproduce. A similar situation occurs with
Fj, a distally expressed protein that probably modulates the activity of Ds or
Ft (Ma et al., 2003
Although we cannot use the crossvein spacing defect to distinguish between
gains and losses in Ft or Ds function, it is an extremely sensitive, and thus
useful, indicator of the perturbation of Ft or Ds function. All four of the Ft
and Ds deletion constructs induced crossvein spacing defects
(Fig. 7G,H,
Fig. 8F-H). This included
UAS-ds
ECD. Although misexpression with
tub-gal4 caused a milder crossvein defect than observed with the
other Ds constructs (Fig. 8G),
strong defects were observed with drivers such as en-gal4
(Fig. 8H).
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
ECD
construct lacks almost the entire extracellular domain and cannot bind or
stabilize Ds in vitro or in vivo. Nonetheless, it can rescue the lethality,
overgrowth and PCP defects of ft alleles that should be null for any
adhesive or receptor function, and in a wild-type background can disrupt
proximodistal patterning. This suggests that the intracellular domain of Ft
can act in the absence of binding between endogenous Ft and Ds, or indeed
between Ft and any other extracellular ligand, as long as sufficient levels
are expressed.
Conversely, we found that a form of Ft lacking the intracellular domain
(Ft
ICD) failed to rescue overgrowth in ft mutants. In fact,
this form acted as a strong dominant negative, inducing overgrowth of
wild-type and ft mutant imaginal discs. This occurred despite the
ability of Ft
ICD to stabilize endogenous cell surface Ds and Ft,
raising the possibility that Ft
ICD binds to Ds and Ft is a way that
blocks their activities. We cannot, however, rule out the possibility that
Ft
ICD alters the activity of some additional, unknown player. Although
lethality prevented us from determining whether Ft
ICD could rescue
ft mutant PCP defects, expression of Ft
ICD in wild-type wings
also disrupted PCP. These PCP defects were weaker than those observed in
ft mutants, suggesting that Ft
ICD might have stronger effects
on growth control than PCP.
|
ICD construct lacks almost the entire
intracellular domain, but nonetheless can rescue the PCP defects of strong
ds mutants and disrupt PCP in wild-type wings. The Ds
ECD
construct, however, cannot bind or stabilize Ft and cannot rescue ds
mutant PCP defects or influence PCP in wild-type wings. Our results thus
support the hypothesis that in PCP Ds acts chiefly as a ligand for Ft,
modulating its activity.
Nonetheless, we cannot rule out the possibility that the intracellular
domain of Ds has some PCP activity within the context of the whole protein,
and the conservation of large regions of the Ds intracellular domain in its
vertebrate homologs dachsous 1 and dachsous 2 suggests that Ds may have
activity beyond that of a ligand. Thus, it is intriguing that expression of
Ds
ECD can disrupt another ds-sensitive phenotype, crossvein
spacing in wild-type wings. As crossvein spacing defects can result from
either gains or losses in Ds or Ft function, it is possible that this defect
is caused by disrupting the function of endogenous Ds, and thus the ability of
that Ds to signal via Ft. However, Ds
ECD did not cause any obvious
change in the levels of endogenous Ds (see Fig. S1 in the supplementary
material). Moreover, loss of Ds normally causes visible destabilization of
cell surface Ft (Ma et al.,
2003
; Strutt and Strutt,
2002
), and we did not see any changes in Ft levels in cells
misexpressing Ds
ECD (Fig.
2G).
ds mutations can also enhance the overgrowth observed in mutants
that lack the intracellular domain of Ft, indicating that in overgrowth, Ds
activity is not completely dependent on regulating the activity of the
intracellular domain of Ft. In this respect, overgrowth differs from PCP, as
ft mutants and ds ft double mutants produce identical PCP
phenotypes (Ma et al., 2003
).
Our result could be explained if Ds regulates growth via its intracellular
domain. Alternatively, Ds may be acting as an extracellular ligand for a
binding partner other than Ft.
Mechanisms of Ft and Ds signaling
Our results support the hypothesis the Ft signals via its intracellular
domain in growth control, PCP and proximodistal patterning. Similarly, it is
likely that the intracellular domain of Ds contributes to proximodistal
patterning and perhaps growth control. The conservation of long stretches of
the intracellular domain of Ft and Ds in the vertebrate homologs Fat4,
dachsous 1 and dachsous 2 also suggests that there is conserved binding to
intracellular factors.
There are no known binding partners for the intracellular domain of Ds or
dachsous-like proteins. The intracellular domain of Drosophila Ft
also lacks the ENA-VASP binding sites that mediate at least some of the
function of vertebrate Fat1 in vitro
(Moeller et al., 2004
;
Tanoue and Takeichi, 2004
;
Tanoue and Takeichi, 2005
).
The intracellular domain of Drosophila Ft can bind the atrophin
Grunge, and genetic evidence suggests a link between Grunge and PCP
(Fanto et al., 2003
). However,
it is not yet clear if Grunge acts downstream of Ft, nor is it clear how
atrophins, which act as transcriptional co-repressors
(Erkner et al., 2002
;
Zhang et al., 2002
;
Zoltewicz et al., 2004
), could
polarize cells. grunge mutants also do not apparently reproduce the
effects of ft mutants on disc growth
(Fanto et al., 2003
;
Zhang et al., 2002
) or on
wg expression in the prospective wing hinge
(Cho and Irvine, 2004
).
Some evidence suggests that Ds and Ft regulate growth and patterning by
altering either the expression of wg in the prospective wing hinge or
the response to Wg signaling (Cho and
Irvine, 2004
; Rodriguez,
2004
; Jaiswal et al.,
2006
). However, our results make it unlikely that this can explain
all but a small part of the overgrowth phenotype. The overgrowth induced by
ft mutations or Ft
ICD occurred without any consistent change
in the expression of Wg target genes Dll or Vg, or in the expression of
wg. Moreover, Ft
ICD induced overgrowth in the entire wing
disc, but whereas increased Wg signaling can induce overgrowth in the hinge
(Neumann and Cohen, 1996
), in
the prospective wing blade Wg signaling reduces growth
(Johnston and Sanders, 2003
).
Our results are consistent with the failure of mutants in the Wg signaling
pathway to modify the ft overgrowth phenotype
(Garoia et al., 2000
;
Garoia et al., 2005
;
Resino and Garcia-Bellido,
2004
).
A recent study has suggested a possible link between overgrowth and Ras
signaling; mild reductions in Ras function that have little effect on the
growth of wild-type cells can block the overgrowth observed in ft
mutant clones (Garoia et al.,
2005
). It remains to be seen whether Ft can actually affect Ras
signaling, or whether this represents the convergence of the two pathways on a
shared target.
Orienting PCP in the wing
Because Ds is expressed in an apparently graded fashion along the axes of
polarity, it was suggested that Ds provides a global cue that orients PCP in
the eye, wing and abdomen (Casal et al.,
2002
; Ma et al.,
2003
; Yang et al.,
2002
). But whereas patterned Ds misexpression is sufficient to
reorient PCP, and patterned Ds expression does appear to be necessary for
normal PCP in the eye, in the wing uniform Ds expression is able to rescue
most of the ds mutant PCP defects
(Matakatsu and Blair, 2004
;
Simon, 2004
). This suggests
that most of the PCP defects in ds mutant wings are caused, not by a
change in the spatial regulation of Ds-Ft signaling, but rather by the loss of
a basal level of signaling required for the proper activity of some other
polarizing cue. These results left open the possibility that Ft activity is
being spatially regulated by an extracellular ligand other than Ds. However,
we show here that ft mutant PCP defects can be substantially rescued
by uniform expression of Ft
ECD, a form of Ft that cannot bind Ds, or
probably any other ligand.
There is, however, a region in the proximal wing where we were unable to
rescue PCP defects with uniform expression of either Ds
(Matakatsu and Blair, 2004
),
Ft, or Ft
ECD. This is also the region of the wing where there is a
boundary or sharp gradient between proximal regions with high and distal
regions with low ds expression
(Matakatsu and Blair, 2004
)
(see Fig. S5A,B in the supplementary material). Thus, it remains possible that
Ds and Ft activities are permissive in much of the wing but, in the proximal
wing, spatially instructive. The different sensitivities of different regions
to changes in Ds and Ft may reflect localized differences in the strength of
other partially redundant polarizing cues.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
Supplementary material for this article is available at http://dev.biologists.org/cgi/content/full/133/12/2315/DC1
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