The proposed experiments focus on interactions between maternal and zygotic components during cellularization and gastrulation in Drosophila development. We will study two genes [folded gastrulation (=fog) and concertina (=cta)] which are required for normal formation of the posterior midgut, characterizing the morphological phenotypes of both loci in terms of cell shape and morphogenetic movements. By injecting wild type cytoplasm into eggs from cta femase, we will test whether cta= activity is localized to the same regions of the embryo known to required fog expression. Both cat and fog will be cloned. In situ hybridization and antibodies to their respective protein products will be used to determine whether the gene products are localized only to the posterior regions of the embryo affected by each mutant. The probes will also be used to define in molecular terms the epistatic relationships between the two loci. We will also study two zygotically active loci (nullo 6F1-2 and halo, 22A) which cause abnormalities in actin and lipid distribution early during cellularization. The phenotype of mutants and wild type embryos processes will be characterized morphologically and genetic mosaics will be used to determine the autonomy of the phenotypes and the specificity of the gene products for embryogenesis. Interactions between both loci and maternal effect mutations shown to affect cellularization will be analyzed. The nullo locus will be cloned and the distribution of its protein product during the establishment of the hexagonal actin arrays will be described.

Project Start
1981-08-01
Project End
1994-04-30
Budget Start
1989-08-01
Budget End
1990-04-30
Support Year
9
Fiscal Year
1989
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Princeton University
Department
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
002484665
City
Princeton
State
NJ
Country
United States
Zip Code
08544
Weng, Mo; Wieschaus, Eric (2017) Polarity protein Par3/Bazooka follows myosin-dependent junction repositioning. Dev Biol 422:125-134
Falahati, Hanieh; Wieschaus, Eric (2017) Independent active and thermodynamic processes govern the nucleolus assembly in vivo. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 114:1335-1340
He, Bing; Martin, Adam; Wieschaus, Eric (2016) Flow-dependent myosin recruitment during Drosophila cellularization requires zygotic dunk activity. Development 143:2417-30
Blythe, Shelby A; Wieschaus, Eric F (2016) Establishment and maintenance of heritable chromatin structure during early Drosophila embryogenesis. Elife 5:
Weng, Mo; Wieschaus, Eric (2016) Myosin-dependent remodeling of adherens junctions protects junctions from Snail-dependent disassembly. J Cell Biol 212:219-29
Falahati, Hanieh; Pelham-Webb, Bobbie; Blythe, Shelby et al. (2016) Nucleation by rRNA Dictates the Precision of Nucleolus Assembly. Curr Biol 26:277-85
Blythe, Shelby A; Wieschaus, Eric F (2015) Zygotic genome activation triggers the DNA replication checkpoint at the midblastula transition. Cell 160:1169-81
Polyakov, Oleg; He, Bing; Swan, Michael et al. (2014) Passive mechanical forces control cell-shape change during Drosophila ventral furrow formation. Biophys J 107:998-1010
He, Bing; Doubrovinski, Konstantin; Polyakov, Oleg et al. (2014) Apical constriction drives tissue-scale hydrodynamic flow to mediate cell elongation. Nature 508:392-6
Di Talia, Stefano; Wieschaus, Eric F (2014) Simple biochemical pathways far from steady state can provide switchlike and integrated responses. Biophys J 107:L1-L4

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