Chapter 21 The Genetic Control of Animal Development
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Transcript Chapter 21 The Genetic Control of Animal Development
Studying Segmentation
Mutants in Balanced Stocks
Drosophila Development
Each egg is surrounded
by a chorion.
The anterior end has
two filaments to allow
oxygen to enter the cell.
Sperm enter through
the micropyle at the
anterior end.
Early Drosophila Development
It takes 1 day for the embryo to develop into a larva.
The larva hatches, feeds, and sheds its skin twice.
After 5 days, the larva becomes immobile and forms
a pupa.
During the pupal stage, cells in the imaginal discs
differentiate into adult structures.
Maternal Gene Activity in
Development
Materials transported into the egg
during oogenesis play a major role
in embryonic development.
Maternal-Effect Genes
Maternal-effect genes contribute to the formation of
healthy eggs; effects of mutations in these genes
may not affect the phenotype of the female making
the eggs but may be seen in the next generation.
A maternal-effect mutation causes a mutant
phenotype in the offspring of a female with a mutant
genotype.
The dorsal Gene:
Offspring of dl/dl Females are
Dorsalized and Inviable
Segmentation Genes
Segmentation genes are required for
segmentation along the anterior-posterior
axis.
They are classified into three groups based
on embryonic mutant phenotypes.
– Gap genes
– Pair-rule genes
– Segment-polarity genes
Gap Genes
Gap genes define segmental regions in the embryo.
Mutations in the gap genes cause a set of contiguous
body segments to be missing.
Four gap genes have been well characterized:
Krüppel, giant, hunchback, and knirps.
Gap gene expression is controlled by bicoid and
nanos.
The gap genes encode transcription factors.
Pair-Rule Genes
Pair-rule genes define a pattern of segments within
the embryo.
Pair-rule genes are regulated by the gap genes and
are expressed in seven alternating bands, dividing
the embryo into 14 parasegments along the anteriorposterior axis.
In pair-rule mutants, every other parasegment is
missing.
The pair-rule genes encode transcription factors.
Expression of fushi tarazu (ftz) in
a Drosophila Blastoderm Embryo
Segment-Polarity Genes
Segment-polarity genes define the anterior and
posterior compartments of individual segments.
Mutations in segment-polarity genes cause part of
each segment to be replaced by a mirror-image copy
of an adjoining half-segment.
Segment-polarity genes refine the segmental pattern
established by the pair-rule genes.
These genes encode transcription factors and
signaling molecules.
Segmentation Gene Mutants
Chapter 21
The Genetic Control of Animal
Development
Sex Determination in
Drosophila and C. elegans
The sex determination signal in both animals is the
ratio of X chromosomes to autosomes. If the ratio is
1.0 or greater, the animal is a female; if the ratio is
0.5 or less, the animal is a male.CLASSIC Definition
But wrong
In Drosophila, the key genes in sex determination
encode proteins that regulate RNA processing.
Sex Determination in Drosophila
Components of the sex-determination
pathway include
– A system to ascertain the X:A ratio ,
– A system to covert this ratio into a
developmental signal, and
– A system to respond to this signal by
producing either male or female structures.
Ascertaining the X:A Ratio
The system that ascertains the X:A ratio involves
interactions between maternally synthesized proteins
in the egg cytoplasm and embryonically synthesized
proteins encoded by several X-linked genes.
The X-linked gene products are called numerator
elements and are twice as abundant in XX embryos
as in XY embryos.
The autosomal gene products are called
denominator elements and antagonize the products
of the numerator elements.
The Sex-lethal (Sxl) Gene
Sxl is the mater regular of the sex
determination pathway in Drosophila.
The X:A ratio is converted into a
molecular signal that controls the
expression of the X-linked Sxl gene.
Function of SXL
SXL regulates splicing of its own
transcript to maintain SXL protein
expression in XX embryos.
SXL also regulates splicing of the
transformer (tra) gene.
Differentiating in Response to
the Signal
TRA, along with TRA2, regulate splicing of doublesex
(dsx) and fruitless (fru).
In XX embryos, where TRA is present, dsx transcripts
are processed to encode a DSX protein that
represses the genes for male development.
In XY embryos, where TRA is absent, dsx transcripts
are processed to encode a DSX protein that
represses the genes for female development.
Fruitless (fru)
Males homozygous
for the fru mutation
court other males.
The fru gene
encodes a zincfinger transcription
factor that regulates
the genes for male
sexual behavior.
Loss-of-Function Mutations in SexDetermination Genes in Drosophila
Mutations in Sxl prevent SXL protein from
being made in males; homozygous mutants
would develop into males but die as embryos.
Mutations in transformer and transformer2
cause both XX and XY animals to develop
into males.
Mutations in dsx cause both XX and XY
embryos to develop into intersexes.
Key Points
In Drosophila the pathway that controls
sexual differentiation involves some genes
that ascertain the X:A ratio, some that convert
this ratio into a developmental signal, and
others that respond to the signal by producing
either male or female structures.
The Sex-lethal (Sxl) gene plays a key role in
Drosophila sexual development by regulating
the splicing of its own transcript and that of
another gene (tra).