Searched for: in-biosketch:yes
person:cd38
'One receptor' rules in sensory neurons
Mazzoni, Esteban O; Desplan, Claude; Celik, Arzu
With the recent explosion in the characterization of different sensory systems, a general rule is emerging: only one type of sensory receptor molecule is expressed per receptor neuron. The visual system is no exception and, in most cases, photoreceptors express only one visual pigment per cell. However, the mechanisms underlying the exclusion of sensory receptors are poorly understood. As expression of a given receptor in a given cell is often stochastic, a decision must first be made to express one of the many receptors of the same family (i.e. one particular rhodopsin) and this expression must correlate with the silencing of the other receptors. Furthermore, the projection center for the receptors in the brain must be informed of the decision in order to process this information. Although cells can choose from up to hundreds of sensory receptors (e.g. in the olfactory system), they make almost no mistakes. Evidence has recently emerged that the exclusion mechanism involves the sensory receptor molecules themselves. Here, we describe the findings from various systems in mammals and Drosophila, and review evidence that in the simple visual system of the fly, rhodopsin molecules play an important role in sensory receptor exclusion.
PMID: 15855768
ISSN: 0378-5866
CID: 1694882
Doit-on choisir entre liberte et ambition?
Desplan, Claude
ORIGINAL:0009780
ISSN: 0180-8214
CID: 1700032
Nasonia
Beukeboom, Leo; Desplan, Claude
PMID: 14614836
ISSN: 0960-9822
CID: 1694892
Homothorax switches function of Drosophila photoreceptors from color to polarized light sensors
Wernet, Mathias F; Labhart, Thomas; Baumann, Franziska; Mazzoni, Esteban O; Pichaud, Franck; Desplan, Claude
Different classes of photoreceptors (PRs) allow animals to perceive various types of visual information. In the Drosophila eye, the outer PRs of each ommatidium are involved in motion detection while the inner PRs mediate color vision. In addition, flies use a specialized class of inner PRs in the "dorsal rim area" of the eye (DRA) to detect the e-vector of polarized light, allowing them to exploit skylight polarization for orientation. We show that homothorax is both necessary and sufficient for inner PRs to adopt the polarization-sensitive DRA fate instead of the color-sensitive default state. Homothorax increases rhabdomere size and uncouples R7-R8 communication to allow both cells to express the same opsin rather than different ones as required for color vision. Homothorax expression is induced by the iroquois complex and the wingless (wg) pathway. However, crucial wg pathway components are not required, suggesting that additional signals are involved.
PMID: 14636555
ISSN: 0092-8674
CID: 1694902
Otd/Crx, a dual regulator for the specification of ommatidia subtypes in the Drosophila retina
Tahayato, Ali; Sonneville, Remi; Pichaud, Franck; Wernet, Mathias F; Papatsenko, Dmitri; Beaufils, Philippe; Cook, Tiffany; Desplan, Claude
Comparison between the inputs of photoreceptors with different spectral sensitivities is required for color vision. In Drosophila, this is achieved in each ommatidium by the inner photoreceptors R7 and R8. Two classes of ommatidia are distributed stochastically in the retina: 30% contain UV-Rh3 in R7 and blue-Rh5 in R8, while the remaining 70% contain UV-Rh4 in R7 and green-Rh6 in R8. We show here that the distinction between the rhodopsins expressed in the two classes of ommatidia depends on a series of highly conserved homeodomain binding sites present in the rhodopsin promoters. The homeoprotein Orthodenticle acts through these sites to activate rh3 and rh5 in their specific ommatidial subclass and through the same sites to prevent rh6 expression in outer photoreceptors. Therefore, Otd is a key player in the terminal differentiation of subtypes of photoreceptors by regulating rhodopsin expression, a function reminiscent of the role of one of its mammalian homologs, Crx, in eye development.
PMID: 12967559
ISSN: 1534-5807
CID: 1694912
Evolution of development: beyond bicoid
Lynch, Jeremy; Desplan, Claude
The Bicoid-based anterior patterning system of Drosophila embryogenesis appears to be unique to higher dipterans. A new study suggests how this may have evolved out of an alternative mechanism based on cooperating Orthodenticle and Hunchback proteins, the two mechanisms intersecting at the level of downstream target genes.
PMID: 12867048
ISSN: 0960-9822
CID: 1694922
Two Pax genes, eye gone and eyeless, act cooperatively in promoting Drosophila eye development
Jang, Chuen-Chuen; Chao, Ju-Lan; Jones, Nikolas; Yao, Li-Chin; Bessarab, Dmitri A; Kuo, Yien M; Jun, Susie; Desplan, Claude; Beckendorf, Steven K; Sun, Y Henry
We report the identification of a Drosophila Pax gene, eye gone (eyg), which is required for eye development. Loss-of-function eyg mutations cause reduction or absence of the eye. Similar to the Pax6 eyeless (ey) gene, ectopic expression of eyg induces extra eye formation, but at sites different from those induced by ey. Several lines of evidence suggest that eyg and ey act cooperatively: (1) eyg expression is not regulated by ey, nor does it regulate ey expression, (2) eyg-induced ectopic morphogenetic furrow formation does not require ey, nor does ey-induced ectopic eye production require eyg, (3) eyg and ey can partially substitute for the function of the other, and (4) coexpression of eyg and ey has a synergistic enhancement of ectopic eye formation. Our results also show that eyg has two major functions: to promote cell proliferation in the eye disc and to promote eye development through suppression of wg transcription.
PMID: 12756177
ISSN: 0950-1991
CID: 1694932
Distinction between color photoreceptor cell fates is controlled by Prospero in Drosophila
Cook, Tiffany; Pichaud, Franck; Sonneville, Remi; Papatsenko, Dmitri; Desplan, Claude
The Drosophila compound eye consists of approximately 750 independently functioning ommatidia, each containing two photoreceptor subpopulations. The outer photoreceptors participate in motion detection, while the inner photoreceptors contribute to color vision. Although the inner photoreceptors, R7 and R8, terminally differentiate into functionally related cells, they differ in their molecular and morphological makeup. Our data indicates that several aspects of R7 versus R8 cell fate determination are regulated by the transcription factor Prospero (Pros). pros is specifically expressed in R7 cells, and R7 cells mutant for pros derepress R8 rhodopsins, lose R7 rhodopsins and acquire an R8-like morphology. This suggests that R7 inner photoreceptor cell fate is acquired from a default R8-like fate that is regulated, in part, via the direct transcriptional repression of R8 rhodopsins in R7 cells. Furthermore, this study provides transcriptional targets for pros that may lend insight into its role in regulating neuronal development in flies and vertebrates.
PMID: 12791270
ISSN: 1534-5807
CID: 1694942
Developmental biology: Flowers' wings, fruitflies' petals [Comment]
Desplan, Claude; Lecuit, Thomas
PMID: 12634762
ISSN: 0028-0836
CID: 1694952
'De-evolution' of Drosophila toward a more generic mode of axis patterning
Lynch, Jeremy; Desplan, Claude
The genetics of the establishment of the primary axes of the early embryo have been worked out in great detail Drosophila. However, evidence has accumulated that Drosophila employs a mode of patterning that is not shared with most insects. In particular, the use of the morphogenic gradient of the Bicoid homeoprotein appears to be a novel addition to the fly developmental toolkit. To better understand the ancestral mode of patterning that is probably more widely used by insects, several groups have used Evo-Devo approaches as well as sophisticated genetic manipulations of Drosophila to achieve some form of 'de-evolution' of this derived insect. Genetic manipulations of the beetle Tribolium and the wasp Nasonia have validated most of these results.
PMID: 14756325
ISSN: 0214-6282
CID: 1694962