Title

Evolution Of The Drosophila Broad Locus: The Manduca Sexta Broad Z4 Isoform Has Biological Activity In Drosophila

Keywords

BR-C; Broad-Complex; Ecdysone; Gene duplication; Metamorphosis

Abstract

The Drosophila melanogaster broad locus is essential for normal metamorphic development. Broad encodes three genetically distinct functions (rbp, br, and 2Bc) and a family of four zinc-finger DNA-binding proteins (Z1-Z4). The Z1, Z2, and Z3 protein isoforms are primarily associated with the rbp, br, and 2Bc genetic functions respectively. The Z4 protein isoform also provides some rbp genetic function, however an essential function for the Z4 isoform in metamorphosis has not been identified. To determine the degree of conservation of Z4 function between the tobacco hornworm Manduca sexta and Drosophila we generated transgenic Drosophila expressing the Manduca broad Z4 isoform and used this transgene to rescue rbp mutant lethality during Drosophila metamorphosis. We find that the Manduca Z4 protein has significant biological activity in Drosophila with respect to rescue of rbp-associated lethality. There was also some overlap in effects on cuticle gene expression between the Manduca Z4 and Drosophila Z1 isoforms that was not shared with the Drosophila Z4 isoform. Our findings show that Z4 function has been conserved over the 260-million-year period since the divergence of Diptera and Lepidoptera, and are consistent with the hypothesis that the Drosophila Z4 and Manduca Z4 isoforms have essential roles in metamorphosis.

Publication Date

10-1-2003

Publication Title

Development Genes and Evolution

Volume

213

Issue

10

Number of Pages

471-476

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1007/s00427-003-0354-4

Socpus ID

0242468240 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/0242468240

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