Intrinsic control of muscle attachment sites matching

Author:

Carayon Alexandre,Bataillé Laetitia,Lebreton Gaëlle,Dubois Laurence,Pelletier Aurore,Carrier Yannick,Wystrach AntoineORCID,Vincent Alain,Frendo Jean-LouisORCID

Abstract

AbstractHow a stereotypic muscle pattern is established, and adapted to fit locomotion behaviour is a fascinating question. Here we set up the targeted deletion of cis-regulatory modules (CRMs) controlling the transcription of Drosophila muscle identity transcription factors (iTF) to generate larval muscle identity mutants. By focusing on one muscle transcription and morphology, we show that selection of muscle attachment sites and the precision of muscle/muscle matching is intrinsic to muscle identity. It involves propagation of the iTF expression code from a founder myoblast to the other syncytial nuclei after fusion. Live imaging indicates that the precise staggered muscle attachment pattern involves attraction to tendon cells and homotypic repulsion. Unbalance leads to the formation of abnormal, branched muscles. Single muscle morphology shifts induce subtle locomotor behaviour. Together this work highlights that CRM deletion is an effective setting for creating muscle-specific defects and branched muscles, as new paradigms to study the development of human myopathies affecting subsets of muscles.HighlightsFirst muscle-identity mutants, via deletion of specific cis-regulatory modulesReprogramming of syncytial nuclei is key to muscle morphological identitySelection of muscle attachment sites; attraction and retraction intrinsic to muscle identityGenetically controlled formation of branched muscles, a new paradigm for functional studiesSingle muscle morphology shift induces subtle locomotor behaviour modification

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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