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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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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Morphological intergration between development compartments in the Drosophila wing.

TL;DR: It is concluded that variation among individuals as well as the developmental perturbations responsible for FA generate shape variation primarily through developmental processes that are integrated across both compartments.
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Morphometrics and the role of the phenotype in studies of the evolution of developmental mechanisms.

Christian Peter Klingenberg
- 03 Apr 2002 - 
TL;DR: The new methods of morphometrics combine a geometric concept of shape with the procedures of multivariate statistics, and constitute a powerful and flexible set of tools for analyzing morphological variation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Automated measurement of Drosophila wings.

TL;DR: An automated image analysis system (WINGMACHINE) that enables rapid, highly repeatable measurements of wings in the family Drosophilidae shows that wing shape is quite conservative within the group, but that almost all taxa are diagnosably different from one another.
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Expression and function of decapentaplegic and thick veins during the differentiation of the veins in the Drosophila wing

TL;DR: It is shown that decapentaplegic is expressed in the pupal veins under the control of genes that establish vein territories in the imaginal disc, suggesting that the maintenance of the vein differentiation state during pupal development involves cross-regulatory interactions between these pathways.
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rhomboid and Star interact synergistically to promote EGFR/MAPK signaling during Drosophila wing vein development

TL;DR: It is shown that rho-mediated hyperactivation of the EGFR/MAPK pathway is required for vein formation throughout late larval and early pupal development and mis-expression of rho and S in wild-type and mutant backgrounds reveals that these genes function in a synergistic and co-dependent manner.
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