The International Journal of Developmental Biology

Int. J. Dev. Biol. 53: 795 - 804 (2009)

https://doi.org/10.1387/ijdb.072483jr

Vol 53, Issue 5-6

Special Issue: Pattern Formation

Pattern formation in the Drosophila eye disc

Review | Published: 22 May 2009

Jean-Yves Roignant and Jessica E. Treisman*

Kimmel Center for Biology and Medicine of the Skirball Institute, New York University School of Medicine, Department of Cell Biology, New York, USA

Abstract

Differentiation of the Drosophila compound eye from the eye imaginal disc is a progressive process: columns of cells successively differentiate in a posterior to anterior sequence, clusters of cells form at regularly spaced intervals within each column, and individual photoreceptors differentiate in a defined order within each cluster. The progression of differentiation across the eye disc is driven by a positive autoregulatory loop of expression of the secreted molecule Hedgehog, which is temporally delayed by the intercalation of a second signal, Spitz. Hedgehog refines the spatial position at which each column initiates its differentiation by inducing secondary signals that act over different ranges to control the expression of positive and negative regulators. The position of clusters within each column is controlled by secreted inhibitory signals from clusters in the preceding column, and a single founder neuron, R8, is singled out within each cluster by Notch-mediated lateral inhibition. R8 then sequentially recruits surrounding cells to differentiate by producing a short-range signal, Spitz, which induces a secondary short-range signal, Delta. Intrinsic transcription factors act in combination with these two signals to produce cell-type diversity within the ommatidium. The Hedgehog and Spitz signals are transported along the photoreceptor axons and reused within the brain as long-range and local cues to trigger the differentiation and assembly of target neurons.

Keywords

photoreceptor, autoregulatory loop, Hedgehog, Spitz, Delta

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