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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor and Transforming Growth Factor-β Signaling Contributes to Variation for Wing Shape in Drosophila melanogaster

Ian Dworkin, +1 more
- 01 Jul 2006 - 
- Vol. 173, Iss: 3, pp 1417-1431
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TLDR
In this article, 50 insertional mutations, representing 43 loci in the RTK, Hedgehog, TGF-β pathways, and their genetically interacting factors were used to study the role of these networks on wing shape.
Abstract
Wing development in Drosophila is a common model system for the dissection of genetic networks and their roles during development. In particular, the RTK and TGF-β regulatory networks appear to be involved with numerous aspects of wing development, including patterning, cell determination, growth, proliferation, and survival in the developing imaginal wing disc. However, little is known as to how subtle changes in the function of these genes may contribute to quantitative variation for wing shape, per se. In this study 50 insertional mutations, representing 43 loci in the RTK, Hedgehog, TGF-β pathways, and their genetically interacting factors were used to study the role of these networks on wing shape. To concurrently examine how genetic background modulates the effects of the mutation, each insertion was introgressed into two wild-type genetic backgrounds. Using geometric morphometric methods, it is shown that the majority of these mutations have profound effects on shape but not size of the wing when measured as heterozygotes. To examine the relationships between how each mutation affects wing shape hierarchical clustering was used. Unlike previous observations of environmental canalization, these mutations did not generally increase within-line variation relative to their wild-type counterparts. These results provide an entry point into the genetics of wing shape and are discussed within the framework of the dissection of complex phenotypes.

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Citations
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A role for triglyceride lipase brummer in the regulation of sex differences in Drosophila fat storage and breakdown.

TL;DR: Drosophila is used as an established model for studies on triglyceride metabolism to gain insight into the genes and physiological mechanisms that contribute to sex differences in fat storage and breakdown and identifies bmm as a link between the regulation of triglyceride homeostasis and biological sex.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genomic Consequences of Background Effects on scalloped Mutant Expressivity in the Wing of Drosophila melanogaster

TL;DR: This study demonstrates that phenotypic expressivity of the scallopedE3 (sdE3) mutation of Drosophila melanogaster is background dependent and is the result of at least one major modifier segregating between two standard lab wild-type strains and demonstrates that the epistatic interaction between sdE3 and an optomotor blind mutation is backgrounddependent.
Journal ArticleDOI

A database of wing diversity in the Hawaiian Drosophila.

TL;DR: A photographic database of over 180 mounted, adult wings from 73 species of Hawaiian Drosophila highlights the striking variation in size, shape, venation, and pigmentation in Hawaiian Dosophila, despite their generally low levels of DNA sequence divergence.
Journal ArticleDOI

The genetic basis for variation in resistance to infection in the Drosophila melanogaster genetic reference panel.

TL;DR: A pathway based analysis revealed a network of Pa14 and Ma549-resistance genes that are functionally connected through processes that encompass phagocytosis and engulfment, cell mobility, intermediary metabolism, protein phosphorylation, axon guidance, response to DNA damage, and drug metabolism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Signaling networks during development: the case of asymmetric cell division in the Drosophila nervous system

TL;DR: The need for such in vivo system-wide level approach is illustrated in relation to the mechanisms that underlie the biological process of asymmetric cell division in the Drosophila nervous system.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

R: A Language for Data Analysis and Graphics

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss their experience designing and implementing a statistical computing language, which combines what they felt were useful features from two existing computer languages, and they feel that the new language provides advantages in the areas of portability, computational efficiency, memory management, and scope.
Journal ArticleDOI

Extensions of the Procrustes Method for the Optimal Superimposition of Landmarks

TL;DR: In this paper, a new method is presented that generalizes Siegel and Benson's (1982) resistant-fit theta-rho analysis so that more than two objects can be compared at the same time.
MonographDOI

Morphometric tools for landmark data : geometry and biology

TL;DR: In this article, the principal axes of shape change for triangles and features of shape comparison are discussed. But the authors do not discuss the relationship between landmarks and shape coordinates of triangles.
Book

Geometric morphometrics for biologists: a primer

TL;DR: The second edition of "Geometric Morphometrics for Biologists" represents the current state of the art and adds new examples and summarizes recent literature, as well as provides an overview of new software and step-by-step guidance through details of carrying out the analyses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Canalization of development and the inheritance of acquired characters

Conrad Hal Waddington
- 01 Nov 1942 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors suggest that recent views on the nature of the developmental process make it easier to understand how the genotypes of evolving organisms can respond to the environment in a more co-ordinated fashion.
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