Peripodial adherens junctions regulate Ajuba-Yorkie signaling to preserve fly eye morphology

Author:

DeSantis Dana F.1ORCID,Neal Scott J.1ORCID,Zhou Qingxiang2ORCID,Pignoni Francesca123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Upstate Medical University 1 Department of Neuroscience and Physiology , , 505 Irving Avenue, NRB 4610, Syracuse, NY 13210, USA

2. Upstate Medical University 2 Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences , , 505 Irving Avenue, NRB 4610, Syracuse, NY 13210, USA

3. Upstate Medical University 3 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology , , 505 Irving Avenue, NRB 4610, Syracuse, NY 13210, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACTThe Drosophila eye develops from the larval eye disc, a flattened vesicle comprised of continuous retinal and peripodial epithelia (PE). The PE is an epithelium that plays a supporting role in retinal neurogenesis, but gives rise to cuticle in the adult. We report here that the PE is also necessary to preserve the morphology of the retinal epithelium. Depletion of the adherens junction (AJ) components β-Catenin (β-Cat), DE-Cadherin or α-Catenin from the PE leads to altered disc morphology, characterized by retinal displacement (RDis); so too does loss of the Ajuba protein Jub, an AJ-associated regulator of the transcriptional coactivator Yorkie (Yki). Restoring AJs or overexpressing Yki in β-Cat deficient PE results in suppression of RDis. Additional suppressors of AJ-dependent RDis include knockdown of Rho kinase (Rok) and Dystrophin (Dys). Furthermore, knockdown of βPS integrin (Mys) from the PE results in RDis, while overexpression of Mys can suppress RDis induced by the loss of β-Cat. We thus propose that AJ-Jub-Yki signaling in PE cells regulates PE cell contractile properties and/or attachment to the extracellular matrix to promote normal eye disc morphology.

Funder

Research to Prevent Blindness

SUNY Upstate Medical University: State University of New York Upstate Medical University

National Institutes of Health

Lions 20-Y

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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