Abrams J M, White K, Fessler L I, Steller H
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge 02139.
Development. 1993 Jan;117(1):29-43. doi: 10.1242/dev.117.1.29.
The deliberate and orderly removal of cells by programmed cell death is a common phenomenon during the development of metazoan animals. We have examined the distribution and ultrastructural appearance of cell deaths that occur during embryogenesis in Drosophila melanogaster. A large number of cells die during embryonic development in Drosophila. These cells display ultrastructural features that resemble apoptosis observed in vertebrate systems, including nuclear condensation, fragmentation and engulfment by macrophages. Programmed cell deaths can be rapidly and reliably visualized in living wild-type and mutant Drosophila embryos using the vital dyes acridine orange or nile blue. Acridine orange appears to selectively stain apoptotic forms of death in these preparations, since cells undergoing necrotic deaths were not significantly labelled. Likewise, toluidine blue staining of fixed tissues resulted in highly specific labelling of apoptotic cells, indicating that apoptosis leads to specific biochemical changes responsible for the selective affinity to these dyes. Cell death begins at stage 11 (approximately 7 hours) of embryogenesis and thereafter becomes widespread, affecting many different tissues and regions of the embryo. Although the distribution of dying cells changes drastically over time, the overall pattern of cell death is highly reproducible for any given developmental stage. Detailed analysis of cell death in the central nervous system of stage 16 embryos (13-16 hours) revealed asymmetries in the exact number and position of dying cells on either side of the midline, suggesting that the decision to die may not be strictly predetermined at this stage. This work provides the basis for further molecular genetic studies on the control and execution of programmed cell death in Drosophila.
通过程序性细胞死亡来刻意且有序地清除细胞,这是后生动物发育过程中的一种常见现象。我们已经研究了黑腹果蝇胚胎发生过程中发生的细胞死亡的分布和超微结构特征。在果蝇胚胎发育过程中有大量细胞死亡。这些细胞呈现出的超微结构特征类似于在脊椎动物系统中观察到的细胞凋亡,包括核浓缩、碎片化以及被巨噬细胞吞噬。使用活性染料吖啶橙或尼罗蓝,可以在活体野生型和突变型果蝇胚胎中快速且可靠地观察到程序性细胞死亡。在这些制剂中,吖啶橙似乎能选择性地染出凋亡形式的死亡细胞,因为经历坏死性死亡的细胞没有被显著标记。同样,对固定组织进行甲苯胺蓝染色会导致凋亡细胞的高度特异性标记,这表明细胞凋亡会导致特定的生化变化,从而产生对这些染料的选择性亲和力。细胞死亡在胚胎发生的第11阶段(约7小时)开始,此后变得广泛,影响胚胎的许多不同组织和区域。尽管随着时间的推移,死亡细胞的分布会发生巨大变化,但对于任何给定的发育阶段,细胞死亡的总体模式都是高度可重复的。对第16阶段胚胎(13 - 16小时)中枢神经系统中细胞死亡的详细分析揭示了中线两侧死亡细胞的确切数量和位置存在不对称性,这表明在这个阶段,细胞死亡的决定可能并非严格预先确定的。这项工作为进一步开展关于果蝇程序性细胞死亡的控制和执行的分子遗传学研究奠定了基础。