Author:
KEEGAN J.,SCHMERER M.,RING B.,GARZA D.
Abstract
At the onset of metamorphosis in Drosophila melanogaster, the steroid hormone 20-OH ecdysone
induces a small number of early and early-late puffs in the polytene chromosomes of the third-instar
larval salivary gland whose activity is required for regulating the activity of a larger set of
late puffs. Most of the corresponding early and early-late genes have been found to encode
transcription factors that regulate a much larger set of late genes. In contrast, we describe here the
identification of an ecdysone-regulated gene in the 62E early-late puff, denoted D-spinophilin, that
encodes a protein similar to the mammalian protein spinophilin/neurabin II. The D-spinophilin
protein is predicted to contain a highly conserved PP1-binding domain and adjacent PDZ domain,
as well as a coiled-coil domain and SAM domain, and belongs to a family of related proteins from
diverse organisms. Transcription of D-spinophilin is correlated with 62E puff activity during the
early stages of metamorphosis and is ecdysone-dependent, making this the first member of this
gene family shown to be regulated by a steroid hormone. Examination of the dynamic patterns of
D-spinophilin expression during the early stages of metamorphosis are consistent with a role in
central nervous system metamorphosis as well as a more general role in other tissues. As D-spinophilin
appears to be the only member of this gene family in Drosophila, its study provides an
excellent opportunity to elucidate the role of an important adaptor protein in a genetic model
organism.
Subject
Genetics,General Medicine
Cited by
16 articles.
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