T. Kidd et al., ROUNDABOUT CONTROLS AXON CROSSING OF THE CNS MIDLINE AND DEFINES A NOVEL SUBFAMILY OF EVOLUTIONARILY CONSERVED GUIDANCE RECEPTORS, Cell, 92(2), 1998, pp. 205-215
The robe gene in Drosophila was identified in a large-scale mutant scr
een for genes that control the decision by axons to cross the CNS midl
ine. In robe mutants, too many axons cross and recross the midline. He
re we show that robe encodes an axon guidance receptor that defines a
novel subfamily of immunoglobulin superfamily proteins that is highly
conserved from fruit flies to mammals. For those axons that never cros
s the midline, Robe is expressed on their growth cones from the outset
; for the majority of axons that do cross the midline, Robe is express
ed at high levels on their growth cones only after they cross the midl
ine. Transgenic rescue experiments reveal that Robe can function in a
cell-autonomous fashion. Robe appears to function as the gatekeeper co
ntrolling midline crossing.