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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 15, 1999, 19(16):6942-6954
A Role for amontillado, the Drosophila
Homolog of the Neuropeptide Precursor Processing Protease PC2, in
Triggering Hatching Behavior
Daria E.
Siekhaus and
Robert S.
Fuller
Department of Biochemistry, Stanford University School of Medicine,
Stanford, California 94305-5307
Accurate proteolytic processing of neuropeptide and peptide hormone
precursors by members of the kexin/furin family of proteases is key to
determining both the identities and activities of signaling peptides.
Here we identify amontillado (amon), the
Drosophila melanogaster homolog of the mammalian
neuropeptide processing protease PC2, and show that in contrast to
vertebrate PC2, amontillado expression undergoes
extensive regulation in the nervous system during development.
In situ hybridization reveals that expression of
amontillado is restricted to the final stages of
embryogenesis when it is found in anterior sensory structures and in
only 168 cells in the brain and ventral nerve cord. After larvae hatch from their egg shells, the sensory structures and most cells in the CNS
turn off or substantially reduce amontillado expression, suggesting that amontillado plays a specific role late
in embryogenesis. Larvae lacking the chromosomal region containing
amontillado show no gross anatomical defects and respond
to touch. However, such larvae show a greatly reduced frequency of a
hatching behavior of wild-type Drosophila in which
larvae swing their heads, scraping through the eggshell with their
mouth hooks. Ubiquitous expression of amontillado can
restore near wild-type levels of this behavior, whereas expression of
amontillado with an alanine substitution for the
catalytic histidine cannot. These results suggest that amontillado expression is regulated as part of a
programmed modulation of neural signaling that controls hatching
behavior by producing specific neuropeptides in particular neurons at
an appropriate developmental time.
Key words:
Drosophila melanogaster; hatching behavior; neuropeptide; PC2; protease; development; nervous system
Copyright © 1999 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/99/19166942-13$05.00/0
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