A ROLE FOR THE MESODERM IN ENDODERMAL MIGRATION AND MORPHOGENESIS IN DROSOPHILA

Citation
R. Reuter et al., A ROLE FOR THE MESODERM IN ENDODERMAL MIGRATION AND MORPHOGENESIS IN DROSOPHILA, Development, 119(4), 1993, pp. 1135-1145
Citations number
45
Categorie Soggetti
Developmental Biology
Journal title
ISSN journal
09501991
Volume
119
Issue
4
Year of publication
1993
Pages
1135 - 1145
Database
ISI
SICI code
0950-1991(1993)119:4<1135:ARFTMI>2.0.ZU;2-K
Abstract
The endodermal midgut arises from two primordia, the anterior midgut ( AMG) primordium and the posterior midgut (PMG) primordium, which are s eparated by almost the entire length of the Drosophila embryo. To form the midgut, these two parts have to extend towards each other and to fuse laterally on both sides of the yolk. Shortly before and during th at movement, AMG and PMG are arranged as mesenchymal cell masses, but later the midgut cells form an epithelium. We show that these two aspe cts of midgut development, migration of AMG and PMG and transition to an epithelium, depend on the mesoderm. The extension of the midgut pri mordia is achieved by cell migration along the visceral mesoderm which forms a continuous layer of cells within the germ band. In mutant emb ryos lacking the entire mesoderm or failing to differentiate the visce ral mesoderm, AMG and PMG are formed but do not migrate properly. In a ddition, they fail to form an epithelium and instead either remain as compact cell masses anterior and posterior to the yolk (in twist and s nail mutant embryos) or only occasionally wrap around the yolk before embryogenesis is completed (in tinman-deficient embryos). We conclude that the visceral mesoderm serves as a substratum for the migrating en dodermal cells and that the contact between visceral mesoderm and endo derm is required for the latter to become an epithelium.