Repository logo
 

Planar cell polarity: the prickle gene acts independently on both the Ds/Ft and the Stan/Fz systems

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Casal Jimenez, JE 
Ibáñez-Jiménez, Beatriz 
Lawrence, Peter A 

Abstract

Epithelial cells are polarised within the plane of the epithelium, forming oriented structures whose coordinated and consistent polarity (planar cell polarity, PCP) relates to the principal axes of the body or organ. In Drosophila at least two separate molecular systems generate and interpret intercellular polarity signals: Dachsous/Fat, and the “core” or Stan/Fz system. Here we study the prickle gene and its protein products Prickle and Spiny leg. Much research on PCP has focused on the asymmetric localisation of core proteins in the cell and as a result prickle was placed in the heart of the Stan/Fz system. Here we ask if this view is correct and how the prickle gene relates to the two systems. We find that prickle can affect, separately, both systems — however, neither Pk nor Sple are essential components of the Ds/Ft or the Stan/Fz system, nor do they act as a functional link between the two systems.

Description

Keywords

Abdomen, Dachsous/Fat, Drosophila, Planar cell polarity, Prickle, Starry night/Frizzled, Abdomen, Animals, Cadherins, Cell Adhesion Molecules, Cell Polarity, DNA-Binding Proteins, Drosophila, Drosophila Proteins, Epithelial Cells, Frizzled Receptors, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, LIM Domain Proteins

Journal Title

Development

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0950-1991
1477-9129

Volume Title

145

Publisher

The Company of Biologists
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (107060/Z/15/Z)
Wellcome Trust (096645/Z/11/Z)