Yarnitzky T, Min L, Volk T
Department of Molecular Genetics, The Weizmann Institute of Science, 76100 Rehovot, Israel.
Genes Dev. 1997 Oct 15;11(20):2691-700. doi: 10.1101/gad.11.20.2691.
Inductive interactions between cells of distinct fates underlie the basis for morphogenesis and organogenesis across species. In the Drosophila embryo, somatic myotubes form specific interactions with their epidermal muscle attachment (EMA) cells. The establishment of these interactions is a first step toward further differentiation of the EMA cells into elongated tendon cells containing an organized array of microtubules and microfilaments. Here we show that the molecular signal for terminal differentiation of tendon cells is the secreted Drosophila neuregulin-like growth factor Vein produced by the myotubes. Although vein mRNA is produced by all of the myotubes, Vein protein is secreted and accumulates specifically at the muscle-tendon cell junctional site. In loss-of-function vein mutant embryos, muscle-dependent differentiation of tendon cells, measured by the level of expression of specific markers (Delilah and beta1 tubulin) is blocked. When Vein is expressed in ectopic ectodermal cells, it induces the ectopic expression of these genes. Our results favor the possibility that the Drosophila EGF receptor DER/Egfr expressed by the EMA cells functions as a receptor for Vein. We show that Vein/Egfr binding activates the Ras pathway in the EMA cells leading to the transcription of the tendon-specific genes, stripe, delilah, and beta1 tubulin. In Egfr1F26 mutant embryos that lack functional Egfr expression, the levels of Delilah and beta1 tubulin are very low. In addition, the ability of ectopic Vein to induce the expression of Delilah and beta1 tubulin depends on the presence of functional Egfrs. Finally, activation of the Egfr signaling pathway by either ectopically secreted Spitz, or activated Ras, leads to the ectopic expression of Delilah. These results suggest that inductive interactions between myotubes and their epidermal muscle attachment cells are initiated by the binding of Vein, to the Egfr on the surface of EMA cells.
不同命运的细胞之间的诱导性相互作用是跨物种形态发生和器官发生的基础。在果蝇胚胎中,体肌管与其表皮肌肉附着(EMA)细胞形成特定的相互作用。这些相互作用的建立是EMA细胞进一步分化为含有有组织微管和微丝阵列的细长腱细胞的第一步。在这里,我们表明腱细胞终末分化的分子信号是肌管分泌的果蝇神经调节蛋白样生长因子Vein。虽然所有肌管都产生vein mRNA,但Vein蛋白分泌并特异性地积聚在肌肉 - 腱细胞连接部位。在功能缺失的vein突变胚胎中,通过特定标记物(Delilah和β1微管蛋白)的表达水平衡量的腱细胞的肌肉依赖性分化被阻断。当Vein在异位外胚层细胞中表达时,它会诱导这些基因的异位表达。我们的结果支持EMA细胞表达的果蝇表皮生长因子受体DER/Egfr作为Vein受体发挥作用的可能性。我们表明Vein/Egfr结合激活EMA细胞中的Ras途径,导致腱特异性基因stripe、delilah和β1微管蛋白的转录。在缺乏功能性Egfr表达的Egfr1F26突变胚胎中,Delilah和β1微管蛋白的水平非常低。此外,异位Vein诱导Delilah和β1微管蛋白表达的能力取决于功能性Egfr的存在。最后,通过异位分泌的Spitz或激活的Ras激活Egfr信号通路会导致Delilah的异位表达。这些结果表明,肌管与其表皮肌肉附着细胞之间的诱导性相互作用是由Vein与EMA细胞表面的Egfr结合引发的。