Certain wild strains of Drosophila melanogaster when crossed with laboratory strains or other wild strains produce sterile progeny non-reciprocally. Australian D. melanogaster males from South Australia produce sterile progeny when mated with Canton S females. The sterility is transmissible and may
Involvement of chitin in exoskeleton morphogenesis in Drosophila melanogaster
✍ Scribed by Bernard Moussian; Heinz Schwarz; Slawomir Bartoszewski; Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard
- Book ID
- 102902104
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 733 KB
- Volume
- 264
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0362-2525
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✦ Synopsis
Exoskeletons stabilize cell, tissue, and body morphology in many living organisms including fungi, plants, and arthropods. In insects, the exoskeleton, the cuticle, is produced by epidermal cells as a protein extracellular matrix containing lipids and the polysaccharide chitin, and its formation requires coordinated synthesis, distribution, and modification of these components. Eventually, the stepwise secretion and sorting of the cuticle material results in a layered structure comprising the envelope, the proteinaceous epicuticle, and the chitinous procuticle. To study the role of chitin during cuticle development, we analyzed the consequences of chitin absence in the embryo of Drosophila melanogaster caused by mutations in the Chitin Synthase-1 (CS-1) gene, called krotzkopf verkehrt (kkv). Our histological data confirm that chitin is essential for procuticle integrity and further demonstrate that an intact procuticle is important to assemble and to stabilize the chitin-less epicuticle. Moreover, the phenotype of CS-1/kkv mutant embryos indicates that chitin is required to attach the cuticle to the epidermal cells, thereby maintaining epidermal morphology. Finally, sclerotization and pigmentation, which are the last steps in cuticle differentiation, are impaired in tissues lacking CS-1/kkv function, suggesting that proper cuticle structure is crucial for the activity of the underlying enzymes.
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