1 Committee on Developmental Biology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA
2 Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA
3 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA
* These authors contributed equally to this work
Author for correspondence (e-mail: npatel{at}midway.uchicago.edu)
Accepted June 25, 2001
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SUMMARY |
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Key words: Pax, Drosophila, Schistocerca, Tribolium, Grasshopper, Paired, Gooseberry, Segmentation, Pair-rule, Pattern formation
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INTRODUCTION |
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To better understand segmentation in short germ insects, we have chosen here to focus on homologs of the pair-rule and segment polarity class of segmentation genes in flour beetles and grasshoppers. Segment polarity genes were originally defined by their loss-of-function phenotypes in Drosophila, which reveal patterning defects within each segment of the embryonic cuticle (Nüsslein-Volhard and Wieschaus, 1980). Consistent with their phenotypes, most of these genes are expressed in Drosophila just before and throughout the morphologically segmented germ band stage in a segmentally reiterated pattern. The segment polarity genes that have been most widely studied in other insects are engrailed (en) and wingless (wg). In Drosophila, each is expressed as a single ectodermal stripe within each individual segment, defining the anterior and posterior boundaries, respectively, of each parasegment. These same patterns have thus far been found in all insects examined (Patel, 1994a; Dearden and Akam, 2001), suggesting that segment polarity genes constitute part of the ancestral insect segmentation system. Indeed the role of these genes in patterning segments is likely to be ancient, as they are also expressed in segmental stripes in embryos of non-insect arthropods such as crustaceans (Patel, 1994b; Nulsen and Nagy, 1999) and spiders (Damen et al., 1998).
In contrast to segment polarity genes, pair-rule homologues tend to exhibit more divergent patterns. Pair-rule genes were also originally defined by their loss-of-function phenotypes in Drosophila, in which regions of the embryonic cuticle are deleted with a two-segment periodicity (Nüsslein-Volhard and Wieschaus, 1980). The three that have been widely studied outside of Drosophila are even-skipped (eve), hairy (h), and fushi-tarazu (ftz). In Drosophila, all three of these genes are expressed in stripes of a two-segment periodicity before the onset of gastrulation. After gastrulation, eve is expressed segmentally with refined late stripes in odd-numbered parasegments and weaker so-called minor stripes in even-numbered parasegments (Frasch et al., 1987). The expression of all three of these genes is conserved in the short germ flour beetle Tribolium (Patel, 1994a). In the case of eve, its pair-rule function appears to be conserved as well, in that chromophore-assisted laser inactivation of Eve protein results in a pair-rule phenotype (Schröder et al., 1999). A deletional mutant of the Tribolium Hox complex that includes the ftz ortholog, however, does not exhibit any pair-rule defects (Stuart et al., 1991), indicating that despite its two-segment periodicity, this gene appears to be functioning differently from its Drosophila ortholog. Additionally, genetic screens in Tribolium have produced at least two, possibly three, mutants that display pair-rule phenotypes (Maderspacher et al., 1998; Sulston and Anderson, 1996; Sulston and Anderson, 1998).
In the short germ grasshopper Schistocerca a more distant relative of Drosophila evidence of pair-rule patterning has instead proven elusive. eve and ftz orthologs are reportedly not expressed in periodic stripes in the early embryo, but in broad posterior domains (Dawes et al., 1994; Patel et al., 1992). This suggests that eve and ftz might play altogether different roles in grasshoppers, and raises the possibility that these insects might manage to define and pattern their segments without the use of pair-rule patterning. Alternatively, grasshoppers might use a form of pair-rule patterning that uses only some of the Drosophila pair-rule genes.
We have investigated the embryonic expression of homologs of the Drosophila pair-rule gene paired (prd), the segment polarity gene gooseberry (gsb) and gooseberry-neuro (gsbn), a gene that is expressed in the developing nervous system, but whose function has not yet been defined (Noll, 1993). These three fly genes are the products of two duplication events, the first of which gave rise to prd and an ancestral gsb/gsbn gene, which then subsequently duplicated, giving rise to gsb and gsbn. Together with their vertebrate homologues Pax3 and Pax7, the three genes belong to Pax group III (PgIII), one of at least four subgroups of the Pax family of transcription factors (Balczarek et al., 1997) whose members all possess both a paired domain (PD) and an extended S50 paired-like homeodomain (HD).
In spite of their different roles in Drosophila, the Prd, Gsb and Gsbn proteins appear to be interchangeable with regard to patterning the embryonic cuticle and nervous system. The ubiquitous expression of each gene results in a similar cuticular phenotype. Furthermore, when placed under the control of gsb cis-regulatory elements, the coding region of prd is capable of rescuing gsb- defects in both the cuticle and the expression of target genes (Li and Noll, 1994). The coding region of gsb, when placed under the control of prd cis-regulatory elements, is likewise able to rescue a prd deficiency (Xue and Noll, 1996). Thus, differences in the roles played by prd and gsb in segmentation (as well as gsbn in the developing nervous system) appear to derive solely from their different cis-regulatory systems and their resulting differential expression.
In Drosophila, Prd protein is found in seven primary stripes of a two-segment periodicity at the onset of cellularization, consistent with its role as a pair-rule gene (Gutjahr et al., 1993a). The stripes, each approximately six cell rows wide, are centered on even-numbered parasegments and extend across both anterior and posterior parasegmental boundaries (Fig. 1L). By mid-cellularization the protein is upregulated in the posterior region of stripes 2-7, resulting in a step pattern within each primary stripe. Beginning at mid-gastrulation repression of prd in the middle two cell rows of stripes 2-7 results in the splitting of these stripes. Before germ band extension, this splitting process, together with the narrowing of stripe 1 and the addition of an eighth posterior stripe, results in 14 secondary stripes of alternating intensity, each approximately two cell rows wide (Fig. 1M). These secondary prd stripes correspond to parasegmental boundaries: the anterior cell row expresses wg, while the posterior cell row expresses en (Gutjahr et al., 1993a). Consistent with this pattern of co-expression, prd is required for the activation of both wg and en in the odd-numbered stripes (DiNardo and OFarrell, 1987; Ingham and Hidalgo, 1993). prd is also required for the activation of the odd-numbered stripes of gsb (Baumgartner et al., 1987).
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To better understand the role PgIII genes play in the segmentation of short germ insects, we have focused on both flour beetles, in which expression of pair-rule and segment polarity homologs have thus far been found to resemble Drosophila, and grasshoppers, in which an expression pattern consistent with pair-rule function has not yet been reported. Our approach has been to develop a polyclonal antibody that has allowed us to visualize the products of PgIII genes in embryos of these insects. In both flour beetle and grasshopper embryos, we find that the expression pattern of PgIII genes resembles the pattern in Drosophila. Although these data are consistent with previous results for flour beetles, we show for the first time that a grasshopper segmentation gene is expressed in stripes of a two-segment periodicity, suggesting the existence of a pair-rule prepattern in this insect. To identify the PgIII genes responsible for the observed expression in grasshoppers, we isolated cDNAs of two PgIII genes, pairberry1 (pby1) and pairberry2 (pby2). We describe the structure of these genes as well as their expression patterns in grasshopper embryos.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Immunohistochemistry
Embryos of Drosophila melanogaster were prepared according to the standard protocol (Patel, 1994c). Embryos of Tribolium castaneum were prepared as previously described (Patel et al., 1994). Embryos of Schistocerca americana were prepared as previously described (Patel et al., 1989b), except that embryos were fixed in PEM-FA for 15 minutes, and then washed immediately with PT before incubation with PT-NGS, followed by overnight incubation with primary antibody at 4°C.
In general, staining was completed as previously described (Patel et al., 1989b; Patel, 1994c). In addition to anti-Pby serum and MAb DP201, staining was performed with mAbs 4D9 (anti-En; Patel et al., 1989b), 2B8 (anti-Eve)(Patel., 1994) and PP7C11 (anti-Hb)(Patel et al., 2001), as well as 16F12 (anti-Gsb) and 9A1 (anti-Gsbn), which were kindly provided by Bob Holmgren.
Cloning and sequence analysis
Total RNA was isolated with TRIzol Reagent (Gibco BRL) from three collections of embryos of the grasshopper Shistocerca americana at 20-25%, 25-30% and 30-35% of development (Bentley et al., 1979; Patel et al., 1989a). Three separate pools of cDNA were then generated from these RNA collections with the SuperScript Preamplification System (Gibco BRL) and used for initial PCR screens using nested degenerate primers (first, 5'-GGN GGN GTN TTY ATH AAY GG-3' and 5'-RTT NSW RAA CCA NAC YTG-3', then 5'-MAR ATH GTN GAR ATG GC-3' and 5'-RTA NAC RTC NGG RTA YTG-3') based on the PD and HD of Drosophila and mouse PgIII genes. The three cDNA pools were sampled with seven independent PCR reactions from which 87 clones were sequenced. No PgIII genes other than pby1 and pby2 were found.
Additional sequence 3' of the HD of pby1 and pby2 was obtained using 3' RACE (Gibco BRL). Phylogenetic trees are based on an amino acid alignment of a partial PD (98 amino acids) or both a partial PD plus the HD (63 amino acids; see Fig. 3A). The optimality criterion was maximum parsimony using the ProtPars step matrix (PHYLIP (Phylogeny Inference Package), J. Felsenstein, 1993) and searches were performed in PAUP* v4.0b8 (Swofford, 2001) using the branch and bound algorithm.
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The embryos were then washed at 65°C in the following solutions of SDS-Hyb and 1x PBS containing 0.1% Tween-20 (PTw): 2x20 minutes (80% SDS-Hyb/20% PTw); 2x20 minutes and 2x1 hour (50% SDS-Hyb/50% PTw); 2x20 minutes in (20% SDS-Hyb/80% PTw); then 2x20 minutes (100% PTw). Finally, embryos were washed at room temperature for 2x20 minutes in 1x PBS with 0.1% bovine serum albumin and 0.1% Triton X-100 (PBT) before adding sheep anti-digoxigenin-AP diluted 1:3000 in PBT, and incubating at 4°C overnight. The next day, embryos were washed 4x20 minutes and 2x60 minutes in PBT before performing the color reaction.
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RESULTS |
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When applied to embryos of other insects the affinity-purified antibody reveals striped patterns similar to those in Drosophila, suggesting that it recognizes the products of PgIII genes more generally. In light of this crossreactivity, we refer to this polyclonal antibody as anti-Pairberry (anti-Pby), and to the pattern it reveals as the Pairberry (Pby) pattern.
Expression of Pax group III genes in Tribolium mimics the pattern in Drosophila
The expression of segment polarity and pair-rule homologs in the flour beetle Tribolium have thus far been shown to be similar to Drosophila (Patel, 1994a; Brown et al., 1994a; Brown et al., 1994b). Tribolium probably also possesses at least three PgIII genes (Wim Damen and Martin Klingler, personal communication). We thus predicted that the Pby pattern in Tribolium should closely mimic the combined pattern of Prd, Gsb and Gsbn in Drosophila.
As with Drosophila Prd, the Pby pattern (the sum product of presumptive PgIII genes) in Tribolium castaneum appears in the blastoderm as a broad anterior domain, corresponding in Tribolium to the presumptive serosa (Fig. 2A,B). Concurrently, Eve protein is found in a broad posterior domain (Fig. 2C). Before gastrulation, a Pby stripe corresponding to the mandibular segment appears de novo (Fig. 2D,E). The stripe is positioned just anterior to the first of two broad Eve stripes, which form sequentially from the posterior domain before gastrulation (Fig. 2F). Like the mandibular stripe of Prd in Drosophila, this Pby stripe does not split.
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As the Tribolium germband continues to extend posteriorly, the broad primary Pby stripes, like the early Prd stripes of Drosophila, split by loss of expression in the center of each stripe (Fig. 2J-N). Of the resulting two secondary stripes, the anterior stripe is transiently narrower than the posterior stripe. This is similar to the splitting of broad primary Eve stripes in this insect, though in the case of Eve it is the posterior secondary stripe that is transiently narrower and the primary stripes originate from a posterior domain, rather than appearing de novo (Patel et al., 1994). As in Drosophila, this splitting process is followed by the appearance of stripes of En, which partially overlap the posterior of the now segmental secondary Pby stripes (Fig. 2M-S). After the appearance of En, the secondary Pby stripes undergo restriction to the neuroectoderm in a manner similar to Drosophila Gsb (Fig. 2, compare R with Q). Later, during Tribolium neurogenesis, the Pby pattern is similar to the neural pattern for Drosophila Gsb and Gsbn (not shown). These observations suggest that anti-Pby recognizes the products of PgIII genes generally, as well as demonstrating that the expression pattern of these genes in Tribolium closely mimics their pattern in Drosophila.
Schistocerca possesses at least two Pax group III genes
Anti-Pby also revealed a striped pattern in embryos of the grasshopper Schistocerca americana. Like Tribolium, this pattern is similar to the pattern in Drosophila, but with some important differences. In order to identify the PgIII genes responsible for the grasshopper Pby pattern, we screened embryonic cDNA pools for PgIII genes by degenerate PCR followed by 3' RACE. Our screen yielded two unique partial cDNAs, which we named pairberry1 (pby1) and pairberry2 (pby2).
The cDNA sequences of pby1 and pby2 predict proteins that each possess a PD plus an extended S50 paired-like HD and terminate 39 and 148 amino acids, respectively, after the HD (Fig. 3A,B). Within the PD and HD, the grasshopper genes are highly similar to one another and to Drosophila prd, gsb and gsbn, yet lack significant sequence similarity C-terminal to the HD. Both pby1 and pby2 also possess the octapeptide sequence shared by gsb, gsbn, pax-3 and pax-7, but not by prd (Frigerio et al., 1986). Finally, we were able to detect alternatively spliced forms not reported for any of the Drosophila genes. The alternate splice forms result in the insertion of five amino acids in the PD of Pby1 and the deletion of three amino acids from the HD of Pby2 (Fig. 3A). The pby1 splice site is shared by gsbn but not by gsb or prd. The splice site in pby2 appears to be unique among insect PgIII genes.
Phylogenetic analysis supports the inclusion of pby1 and pby2 within PgIII, but fails to resolve their relationship to the fly genes (Fig. 3C). The PD and HD amino acid and nucleotide sequence for pby1 and pby2 show >80% identity to each other and >60% identity to each of the three fly genes. Thus, pby1 and pby2 may be more closely related to each other than either is to prd, gsb, or gsbn. Finally, the combined distribution of pby1 and pby2 mRNA fully accounts for the striped Pby pattern in grasshopper embryos (Fig. 4). Thus, while we cannot rule-out the existence of additional homologs, we believe that we have found all of the PgIII genes in Schistocerca.
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Before 20%, pby1 is transcribed in a complex pattern that culminates in seven segmental stripes of the head and thorax (An, Mn, Mx, La, T1-3; Fig. 4A). Transcripts of pby2, however, are not detectable at these stages (Fig. 4B). As the pattern of Pby stripes mimics the pattern of pby1 stripes at these stages (Fig. 4A,D), we presume that these Pby stripes are the product of pby1 and not pby2. In 20-27% embryos, abdominal pby1 stripes appear at least four segmental stripes more posterior of the most posterior pby2 and En stripes (Fig. 4F-H). Thus, in the abdomen, as in the head and thorax, pby1 is transcribed before pby2. As the pattern of posterior abdominal Pby stripes is identical to the pattern of posterior abdominal pby1 stripes at these stages (Fig. 4F,I), we also presume that the Pby stripes in the posterior pre-En region of the embryo are the product of pby1 and not pby2, while Pby stripes in the anterior post-En region reflect the protein products of both genes.
In addition to these 19 stripes, the Pby pattern also includes repeating patterns of neural expression and various non-stripe domains in the pre-antennal region of the head, in appendage primordia, in lateral ectoderm of the abdomen and in the telson (Fig. 4K-O, Fig. 5H). Most of these non-stripe domains are found in the mRNA pattern of either pby1 or pby2, or both, and the majority do not appear until after 30%, well after segmentation is complete. The portions of the Pby pattern that are not due to either pby1 or pby2 are probably due to crossreactivity to proteins possessing paired-like homeodomains, such as aristaless and repo.
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After the appearance of the gnathal and thoracic Pby1 stripes, anti-Pby reveals a bilateral pair of stripes in the An segment (Fig. 5H, red arrowhead). A bilateral pair of En stripes arises just posterior to the An Pby1 stripes (Fig. 4C-E, Fig. 6B, 17%). En stripes then appear in the Mn, T1 and T2 segments. Each En stripe lies posterior to a Pby1 stripe, the two stripes overlapping by one to two cell rows (Fig. 4F-J). This ordering of the appearance of En stripes (An at 17%, followed by Mn, T1 and T2 at
18%, Fig. 6A) differs from the order previously reported for this species (Patel et al., 1989a), suggesting that the timing of En stripes may be polymorphic. The only remaining anterior Pby1 stripe, that of the Ic segment, does not appear until
20-21%, just before the Ic En stripe (Fig. 4F, Fig. 6B). After the appearance of adjacent En stripes, both the gnathal and thoracic Pby1 stripes undergo restriction to the ventral neuroectoderm (Fig. 4F, Fig. 6B, 20-22%), in a manner similar to Drosophila gsb.
Abdominal stripes
The origin of the T2 and T3 stripes from within a single broad domain of expression suggests a transient two-segment periodicity for the stripes of pby1 in the thorax. In the abdomen as well, this process two adjacent stripes arising from within an initially broad domain is repeated five times, reminiscent of the process by which prd acquires its segmental pattern in Drosophila. The process in grasshoppers consists of the following steps: (1) appearance of a broad domain (1015 cells wide) near the extending posterior end; (2) increased expression in a stripe (four cells wide) at the anterior edge of the broad domain with a concomitant decrease in expression levels in the posterior portion; and (3) appearance of a second posterior stripe (
four cells wide) arising from within the fading posterior portion of the broad domain (Fig. 7). An essential observation in this regard is that broad domains are only observed posterior to stripes of even-numbered abdominal segments. Hence, abdominal Pby1 stripes emerge from the following broad domains: A1/A2, A3 /A4, A5/A6, A7/A8 and A9/A10. At least at the protein level, broad domains typically appear less refined at their posterior edge, so that low levels of protein often extend to the posterior tip of the embryo. In general, low levels of protein are also observed between nascent stripes, but these interstripe regions are quickly cleared as the stripes mature, as can be seen in more anterior segments (Fig. 7B). Finally, the last stripe to appear that of A11 appears in restricted form at
35% and is not associated with an En stripe (Fig. 4K-O), as is the case for the A11 Gsb stripe in Drosophila (Gutjahr et al., 1993b).
After forming, each of the segmental abdominal stripes narrows along the anterior-posterior axis to span only 2-3 cell rows. This narrowing is followed by the appearance of an En stripe posterior to the Pby1 stripe, such that the two stripes overlap by one cell row (Fig. 4, 23%; Fig. 7B). In part owing to their early appearance, stripes of Pby1 protein, unlike En, appear to keep pace with the extending posterior tip (Fig. 6B). After the appearance of an adjacent En stripe, each abdominal Pby1 stripe, like the gnathal and thoracic stripes, undergoes restriction to the ventral neuroectoderm and then expands to span four to five cell rows (Fig. 4, 23%). Unlike the segmental secondary stripes of Drosophila Prd, in which the posterior prd-expressing cell also expresses en (Gutjahr et al., 1993a), nascent En stripes are not situated entirely within Pby1 stripes. Pby1 stripes instead behave more like Gsb in this respect, overlapping En stripes by just one cell row.
Striped expression of pairberry2
The distribution of pby2 mRNA reveals that this gene is expressed in a pattern spatially coincident with, but temporally delayed with respect to, pby1. In particular, pby2 is expressed exclusively in stripes coincident with mature (i.e., ventrally restricted) pby1 stripes and these stripes appear at approximately the same time as stripes of En protein and slightly before stripes of Pby1 protein become ventrally restricted (Fig. 4G). The earliest pby2 stripes appear at 19-21% in the An, thoracic and gnathal segments, followed by the Ic and abdominal stripes, the latter appearing in strict anterior to posterior progression (Fig. 6A,B). Based on its spatial and temporal dynamics, pby2 expression is reminiscent of Drosophila gsbn and late gsb expression.
The expression of pairberry1 and pairberry2 partially account for the non-striped Pairberry pattern in Schistocerca
As pby1 and pby2 were the only grasshopper PgIII genes found in our screen, we reasoned that these genes together should be responsible for most, if not all, of the Pby pattern in this insect. Surprisingly, pby1 expression alone recapitulates the entire striped Pby pattern (Fig. 4). pby1 also recapitulates some (but not all) of the Pby domains in the pre-antennal region of the head, the earliest of which (Fig. 4A,D,E, brown arrows; Fig. 5E, red arrow) is found in the eye lobe and is likely to be coincident with a similar domain of wg (Dearden and Akam, 2001; Friedrich and Benzer, 2000). At 23%, pby1 mRNA is found in two separate domains in the eye lobe (Fig. 4F), while at 35% the pre-antennal domains of pby1 are located more anteriorly (Fig. 4K). pby1 is also expressed in at least one of three circumferential rings in the limb primordia (Fig. 4K,N,O, red arrows) and these rings are also part of the Tribolium Pby pattern (Fig. 2S).
pby2 expression also recapitulates some non-stripe features of the Pby pattern. After 30% pby2 joins pby1 in apparently coincident pre-antennal domains (Fig. 4L) and by
40% in at least one limb ring (not shown). pby2 is also expressed in the mandibles and in the maxilla and labium primordia (corresponding to the emerging galea, lacinia and lingula) (Fig. 4L,N,O, red arrowheads) and at later stages (>40%) pby1 mRNA is found in these domains as well (not shown). This late gnathal expression is also part of the Tribolium Pby pattern (Fig. 2S) and is reminiscent of the late expression of Drosophila prd, which is also found at the base of the embryonic gnathal protuberances (Fig. 1Q-T).
Although pby1 and pby2 account for most of the Pby pattern in Schistocerca, some non-stripe features of the Pby pattern are apparently not due to either of these genes. These Pby domains are instead probably due to crossreactivity to additional proteins possessing the putative epitope shared by the products of PgIII genes. These non-PgIII Pby patterns include: (1) staining in the amnion (not shown); (2) pre-antennal domains that initially lie more anterior than pby1 (Fig. 4D,E, brown arrowheads; Fig. 5H, black arrows); (3) additional staining in the mandibles (Fig. 4I,J,N,O, asterisk) plus the distal tips of the maxillary and labial palps, limb primordia, lateral abdominal ectoderm (Fig. 4N,O) and the telson (Fig. 4N,O, black arrowheads); and (4) glia of the developing central and peripheral nervous system (not shown). All four of these patterns are also observed in Tribolium and the latter three in Drosophila (not shown). The source of Pby staining in the amnion of Schistocerca and Tribolium is unknown, but staining in the pre-antennal region of all three insects is probably due to one or several of the paired-like homeodomain proteins known to be expressed in the developing brain and eye of Drosophila. Pby domains in the mandibles and the tips of the maxillary and labial palps, limb primordia, lateral abdominal ectoderm and the telson are probably due to aristaless, as this gene is expressed in analogous domains in Drosophila and possesses a paired-like homeodomain. Furthermore, anti-Pby staining of Drosophila wing and leg imaginal discs matches the published description of aristaless (Schneitz et al., 1993, not shown). The Pby staining in glia is almost certainly due to repo, as the product of this gene also possesses a paired-like homeodomain and is found in the glia of Drosophila and Schistocerca embryos (Halter et al., 1995). Consistent with this, the Pby glial pattern is observed in wild-type Drosophila embryos, but lost in repo4e25 embryos (Xiong et al., 1994, not shown). The non-PgIII crossreactivity of anti-Pby should be useful in comparing the expression of these additional genes between various arthropods.
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DISCUSSION |
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pairberry1 and pairberry2 may be the result of duplication of the ancestral PgIII gene
With the exception of possible nematode homologs (Hobert and Ruvkun, 1999), protostome PgIII genes have thus far not been reported outside Drosophila. We have isolated two PgIII genes from Schistocerca, which we have named pairberry1 (pby1) and pairberry2 (pby2). Each gene possesses both a paired box and an extended S50 paired-like homeobox (Fig. 3A,B). Phylogenetic analysis and high sequence similarity to Drosophila prd, gsb and gsbn supports the inclusion of pby1 and pby2 within PgIII (Fig. 3C). Additionally, pby1 and pby2 appear to be more closely related to each other than either is to prd, gsb or gsbn, suggesting they may be the result of an independent duplication (Fig. 3C). This conclusion is tempered, however, by the possibility of homogenization of pby1 and pby2 via gene conversion.
Although the two grasshopper genes may be closely related, we were unable to unequivocally resolve their relationship to the fly genes (Fig. 3C). Although it is possible that pby1 and pby2 result from the duplication of the ancestral gsb/gsbn gene along the lineage leading to Schistocerca after its split with Drosophila, this scenario implies that a grasshopper prd ortholog either exists and has not been found, or was subsequently lost. As the expression patterns of both pby1 and pby2 include elements similar to the expression of each of the three Drosophila genes, we think it more likely that pby1 and pby2 result from an independent duplication of a single ancestral insect PgIII (prd/gsb/gsbn) gene.
The early expression of pairberry1 constitutes evidence for pair-rule patterning in Schistocerca and is reminiscent of Drosophila paired
The early transcript and protein expression patterns of pby1 provide, for the first time, evidence of pair-rule patterning in the grasshopper Schistocerca. Indirect evidence is provided by the order of appearance of the gnathal and thoracic Pby1 stripes. In particular, the onset of the Mx and T1 stripes is delayed relative to their adjacent stripes (Fig. 5F-H, Fig. 6B, 16-17%). Thus, like many segment polarity genes in Drosophila, the order of appearance of these segmental stripes follows a two-segment periodicity. This may reflect, as it does in Drosophila, regulation by an underlying pair-rule patterning mechanism.
Stronger evidence for pair-rule patterning lies with the early domains of pby1 expression from T2 to A10. Stripes of these segments originate as broad domains of a two-segment periodicity at the extending posterior tip, each of which subsequently splits into a pair of adjacent segmental stripes. Thus, adjacent stripes arise by subtly different means. The segmental stripes of T2, A1, A3, A5, A7 and A9 resolve from the anterior edge of sequentially appearing broad domains. By contrast, the segmental stripes of T3, A2, A4, A6, A8 and A10 resolve from within the posterior portions of the same respective broad domains (Fig. 6B, Fig. 7). This resolution of broad domains into adjacent pairs of segmental stripes is analogous to the process by which Drosophila prd acquires its segmental pattern from initial stripes of a two-segment periodicity (Fig. 1B,C).
Although similar to Drosophila and flour beetles, the broad domains in grasshopper exhibit at least one notable difference. When compared with either Drosophila or flour beetles, the pairing of stripes in grasshoppers is shifted by one segment. For example, in grasshoppers, the Pby1 stripes of A1 and A2 derive from a single A1/A2 broad domain, while in flies and flour beetles the segmental Pby stripes of A1 and A2 derive from the T3/A1 and A2/A3 broad domains (primary Prd stripes 4 and 5 in Drosophila). The shift in phasing of stripe pairs in Schistocerca when compared with Tribolium and Drosophila is reflected in the fact that the grasshopper A11 Pby1 stripe (Fig. 4K), which appears relatively late, arises without a sister stripe. Such variation in phasing is likely to reflect a spatial shift in the expression of upstream components of the segmentation hierarchy.
An additional similarity of early pby1 expression to Drosophila prd is its timing relative to segment polarity genes. In Drosophila, prd is expressed before en and wg. In Schistocerca, pby1 is expressed before En protein by approximately four to five stripes from 20-27% (Fig. 4A,C,F,H, Fig. 7B). pby1 is, hence, also likely to be expressed ahead of wg, as in Schistocerca gregaria, wg transcript appears only two to three stripes ahead of En protein (Dearden and Akam, 2001; C. J. and N. P., unpublished). Another feature shared by the early pby1 pattern and that of Drosophila prd is the gnathal arc. This early domain comprises the future Pby1 stripes of the Mn, Mx and La segments (Fig. 5C,D,E, Fig. 7B, 10-16%). In Drosophila, prd is also expressed as a single broad stripe before splitting into primary Prd stripes 1 and 2 at the onset of cellularization, just as stripes 3-7 begin to appear (Gutjahr et al., 1993a; Fig. 1A,B,K,L). Primary stripes 1 and 2 in turn give rise to the future Mn, Mx and La secondary stripes of Prd. This early Prd domain in flies is thus remarkably similar to the Pby1 gnathal arc in grasshoppers. We were not able to detect a similar pattern in flour beetle embryos, as the Mn Pby stripe appears de novo (Fig. 2D-F).
The late expression of pairberry1 and pairberry2 is reminiscent of Drosophila gooseberry and gooseberry-neuro
The position of Pby1 stripes just anterior to En with an overlap of one cell row, along with their subsequent restriction to the neuroectoderm (Fig. 5B), is reminiscent of gsb expression in Drosophila (Fig. 1U-Y). Similarly, the delayed appearance of Pby2 stripes, their restricted form, and their coincident expression with Pby1 anterior to En (Fig. 4F-J, Fig. 6) is reminiscent of late gsb expression (Fig. 1X,Y). Additionally, the striped neural expression of both pby1 and pby2 as late as 40% (not shown) is reminiscent of gsbn expression (Fig. 1BB-EE). Thus, only one of two PgIII genes identified in Schistocerca, pby1, is potentially functioning in the capacity of all three PgIII genes in Drosophila (prd, gsb and gsbn), while pby2 is potentially functioning in the capacity of one, or perhaps two, of the Drosophila genes (gsb and gsb-n). Finally, although the behavior pby2 is most similar to Drosophila gsb and gsbn, the late expression of both pby1 and pby2 at the base of the developing gnathal appendages is reminiscent of the late expression of prd at the base of the gnathal protuberances in Drosophila embryos (Fig. 1Q-T, Fig. 4K-O).
pairberry1 may regulate the expression of pairberry2 and segment polarity genes
During Drosophila embryogenesis, the pair-rule gene prd activates the segment polarity gene gsb, which, in turn, activates gsbn. Additionally, the products of these three genes are for the most part functionally interchangeable (Li and Noll, 1994; Xue and Noll, 1996). Given both their similarity to the three fly genes and their coincident expression, pby1 may be required for the activation of pby2.
In Drosophila, prd is also required for the activation of odd-numbered wg stripes (Ingham and Hidalgo, 1993). Thus, Pby1 may be required for activation of wg in Schistocerca americana. The temporal dynamics of wg mRNA in the closely related grasshopper Schistocerca gregaria are consistent with this suggestion (Dearden and Akam, 2001). In Drosophila, prd is also responsible for activating and defining the posterior border of odd-numbered En stripes. This is suggested by the absence of odd-numbered En stripes in prd-negative embryos (DiNardo and OFarrell, 1987), as well as their posterior expansion in heat shocked prd embryos (Morrissey et al., 1991). Consistent with this role, the posterior borders of secondary Prd stripes in Drosophila are coincident with the posterior borders of En stripes (Gutjahr et al., 1993a). In Schistocerca, however, Pby1 does not simultaneously share a posterior border with En. Instead, nascent segmental stripes spanning four cell rows narrow to two cell rows just before the appearance of an adjacent En stripe, which overlaps by only a single row of cells. This lack of temporally coincident expression does not, however, rule out a possible role in activating en, for it is conceivable that the four-cell row domain of Pby1 may activate en before narrowing, with the result that En appears specifically in cells that were previously expressing pby1. A similar situation may hold true for Drosophila, as it has been proposed that, despite the coincident expression of secondary Prd stripes and En, it is instead the earlier primary stripes of Prd that are responsible for the activation of en (Fujioka et al., 1995). Finally, it is important to note that a fully functioning pair-rule mechanism in grasshoppers may well require genes in addition to pby1 that exhibit pair-rule like expression patterns.
The evolution of insect pair-rule patterning
Based on widespread conservation of expression patterns, it seems likely that the Drosophila segment polarity genes functioned as such in the context of the ancestral insect segmentation system. The picture is less clear for pair-rule genes. In light of the more basal phylogenetic position of Schistocerca, it is tempting to view the posterior expression domains of eve and ftz as ancestral for insects, existing before the evolutionary recruitment of these genes to play a role in segmentation (Dawes et al., 1994; Patel et al., 1992). In support of this conjecture, vertebrate orthologs of eve are linked to the Hox clusters and expressed in broad Hox-like domains (Bastian and Gruss, 1990; DEsposito et al., 1991; Dolle et al., 1994; Ruiz i Altaba and Melton, 1989), while the C. elegans eve ortholog, vab-7, is both expressed in a broad posterior domain and required for posterior cell fates (Ahringer, 1996). ftz, a gene closely related to the Antp-class Hox genes, is likewise expressed in a broad Hox-like domain in mites (Telford, 2000).
However, grasshoppers in some respects are likely to represent a derived state for insects. This is probably the case for eve, as this gene is expressed in stripes in spiders (Damen et al., 2000). Thus, it is possible that eve was primitively expressed in both stripes and a posterior domain, but somewhere along the lineage leading to Schistocerca, the gene lost its striped expression. Our observation that a PgIII gene is expressed in stripes of a two-segment periodicity in grasshoppers suggests that pair-rule patterning is part of the ancestral insect segmentation system. However, confirmation of this claim will require closer examination of the striped expression of pair-rule orthologs in primitive insects and non-insect arthropods.
An additional consequence of the molecular data presented here is that Tribolium and Schistocerca appear more similar in their embryology than previously appreciated. Before this study, the non-striped expression of eve and ftz did not allow comparison with the striped expression of pair-rule genes in other insects. The Pby pattern, however, allows such a comparison. In the case of Tribolium, only one Pby stripe, that of the mandibular segment, has formed before the onset of gastrulation (Fig. 2D); eve and ftz stripes at this stage have likewise not formed posterior to the gnathal region (Brown et al., 1994a; Patel et al., 1994). In Schistocerca, we have been unable to detect any pby1 expression before the onset of gastrulation (36 hours AEL), and the first stripe associated with segmentation (the gnathal arc) does not appear until 10% (
50 hours AEL), well after gastrulation has begun (Fig. 5C). Thus, neither Tribolium nor Schistocerca has specified segmental or parasegmental boundaries posterior to the head at the start of gastrulation, conforming to the classical idea of short (as opposed to intermediate) germ embryogenesis (Sander, 1976).
Drosophila prd is at the bottom of the genetic hierarchy of pair-rule genes and this fact, coupled with its later segmental expression, have led some to suggest that in flies prd acts as a bridge between the pair-rule and segment polarity levels of the segmentation hierarchy (Baumgartner and Noll, 1991). If pair-rule patterning is an evolutionarily recent specialization of prd, then the segmental secondary Prd stripes of Drosophila are best seen as the remnants of an ancestral dual function as a pair-rule and segment polarity gene. It is perhaps not surprising then, that pby1 a PgIII gene from a more phylogenetically primitive insect is expressed in both a pair-rule and segment polarity fashion. As one of only two PgIII genes in Schistocerca, pby1 is expressed in a manner reminiscent of the combined pattern of all three PgIII genes in Drosophila. In lacking the specialized expression of the Drosophila genes, pby1 may be our closest approximation of the ancestral insect PgIII gene.
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