» Articles » PMID: 17300994

Gene Expression Patterns in Primary Neuronal Clusters of the Drosophila Embryonic Brain

Overview
Publisher Elsevier
Date 2007 Feb 16
PMID 17300994
Citations 19
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The brain of Drosophila is formed by approximately 100 lineages, each lineage being derived from a stem cell-like neuroblast that segregates from the procephalic neurectoderm of the early embryo. A neuroblast map has been established in great detail for the early embryo, and a suite of molecular markers has been defined for all neuroblasts included in this map [Urbach, R., Technau, G.M. (2003a) Molecular markers for identified neuroblasts in the developing brain of Drosophila. Development 130, 3621-3637]. However, the expression of these markers was not followed into later embryonic or larval stages, mainly due to the fact that anatomical landmarks to which expression patterns could be related had not been defined. Such markers, in the form of stereotyped clusters of neurons whose axons project along cohesive bundles ("primary axon bundles" or "PABs") are now available [Younossi-Hartenstein, A., Nguyen, B., Shy, D., Hartenstein, V. 2006. Embryonic origin of the Drosophila brain neuropile. J. Comp. Neurol. 497, 981-998]. In the present study we have mapped the expression of molecular markers in relationship to primary neuronal clusters and their PABs. The markers we analyzed include many of the genes involved in patterning of the brain along the anteroposterior axis (cephalic gap genes, segment polarity genes) and dorso-ventral axis (columnar patterning genes), as well as genes expressed in the dorsal protocerebrum and visual system (early eye genes). Our analysis represents an important step along the way to identify neuronal lineages of the mature brain with genes expressed in the early embryo in discrete neuroblasts. Furthermore, the analysis helped us to reconstruct the morphogenetic movements that transform the two-dimensional neuroblast layer of the early embryo into the three-dimensional larval brain and provides the basis for deeper understanding of how the embryonic brain develops.

Citing Articles

Metamorphosis of memory circuits in reveals a strategy for evolving a larval brain.

Truman J, Price J, Miyares R, Lee T Elife. 2023; 12.

PMID: 36695420 PMC: 9984194. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.80594.


Regulatory modules mediating the complex neural expression patterns of the homeobrain gene during Drosophila brain development.

Hildebrandt K, Kolb D, Kloppel C, Kaspar P, Wittling F, Hartwig O Hereditas. 2022; 159(1):2.

PMID: 34983686 PMC: 8728971. DOI: 10.1186/s41065-021-00218-5.


Functional analysis of enhancer elements regulating the expression of the Drosophila homeodomain transcription factor DRx by gene targeting.

Kloppel C, Hildebrandt K, Kolb D, Furst N, Bley I, Karlowatz R Hereditas. 2021; 158(1):42.

PMID: 34736520 PMC: 8569992. DOI: 10.1186/s41065-021-00210-z.


Organization of the larval visual circuit.

Larderet I, Fritsch P, Gendre N, Neagu-Maier G, Fetter R, Schneider-Mizell C Elife. 2019; 6.

PMID: 30726702 PMC: 5577918. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.28387.


Functional brain regeneration in the acoel worm Symsagittifera roscoffensis.

Sprecher S, Bernardo-Garcia F, van Giesen L, Hartenstein V, Reichert H, Neves R Biol Open. 2015; 4(12):1688-95.

PMID: 26581588 PMC: 4736034. DOI: 10.1242/bio.014266.


References
1.
Laissue P, Reiter C, Hiesinger P, Halter S, Fischbach K, Stocker R . Three-dimensional reconstruction of the antennal lobe in Drosophila melanogaster. J Comp Neurol. 1999; 405(4):543-52. View

2.
Czerny T, Halder G, Kloter U, Souabni A, Gehring W, Busslinger M . twin of eyeless, a second Pax-6 gene of Drosophila, acts upstream of eyeless in the control of eye development. Mol Cell. 1999; 3(3):297-307. DOI: 10.1016/s1097-2765(00)80457-8. View

3.
Niimi T, Seimiya M, Kloter U, Flister S, Gehring W . Direct regulatory interaction of the eyeless protein with an eye-specific enhancer in the sine oculis gene during eye induction in Drosophila. Development. 1999; 126(10):2253-60. DOI: 10.1242/dev.126.10.2253. View

4.
Strausfeld N, Hansen L, Li Y, Gomez R, Ito K . Evolution, discovery, and interpretations of arthropod mushroom bodies. Learn Mem. 1999; 5(1-2):11-37. PMC: 311242. View

5.
Lee T, Lee A, Luo L . Development of the Drosophila mushroom bodies: sequential generation of three distinct types of neurons from a neuroblast. Development. 1999; 126(18):4065-76. DOI: 10.1242/dev.126.18.4065. View