Publication | Closed Access
A <i>wingless</i> -Dependent Polar Coordinate System in <i>Drosophila</i> Imaginal Discs
272
Citations
39
References
1993
Year
BiologyPattern FormationPolar Coordinate SystemCell PolarityDevelopmental BiologyCell LineageIntegrative BiologyDevelopmental GeneticsGeneticsEvolutionary BiologyMedicineNatural SciencesMorphogenesisMolecular GeneticsSegment Polarity GeneCell Fate DeterminationEvolutionary Developmental BiologySegment Polarity Genes
The patterning of the imaginal discs in Drosophila melanogaster is a progressive process that, like the patterning of the larval epidermis during embryogenesis, requires the activity of segment polarity genes. One segment polarity gene, wingless, encodes a homolog of the mouse proto-oncogene Wnt-1 and plays a prominent role in the patterning of the larval epidermis and the imaginal discs. However, whereas the function of wingless in the embryo is initially associated with a pattern of stripes along the anteroposterior axis that are part of a Cartesian coordinate system, it is shown here that during imaginal development wingless is associated with a pattern of sectors that provide references for a polar coordinate system homologous to that postulated in a well-known model for the regeneration of insect and vertebrate limbs.
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