Elsevier

Developmental Biology

Volume 252, Issue 2, 15 December 2002, Pages 225-240
Developmental Biology

Regular Article
Transcriptional Integration of Competence Modulated by Mutual Repression Generates Cell-Type Specificity within the Cardiogenic Mesoderm

https://doi.org/10.1006/dbio.2002.0846Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Abstract

The way in which spatially patterned cellular identities are generated is a central question of organogenesis. In the case of Drosophila heart formation, the cardiac progenitors are specified in precise mesodermal positions, giving rise to multiple cell types in a highly ordered arrangement. Here, we study the mechanisms by which positional information conveyed by signaling pathways and a combinatorial code of activating and repressing transcription factors work together to confine the expression of the homeobox gene even-skipped (eve) to a small region of the dorsal mesoderm. By manipulating both expression patterns and binding sites for transcription factors, we show that a complex combination of regulatory activities converge on a single enhancer of eve to generate precisely targeted gene expression within the cardiac mesoderm. In particular, ladybird early (lbe), a homeobox gene expressed adjacent to eve, restricts the positive actions of factors downstream of wingless, decapentaplegic, and ras to generate the eve pattern. Mutation of a Lbe binding site causes dramatic expansion of expression and abolishes the responsiveness to repression by lbe. Conversely, eliminating eve in the mesoderm expands lbe expression into the normal eve-expressing territory, suggesting that mutual repression between eve and lbe is essential for delineating the spatial patterns of gene expression that specify cell types within the cardiac mesoderm.

Keywords

even-skipped
heart
cell fate
tinman
ladybird
wingless
TGF-β
repression

Cited by (0)

1

These authors contributed equally to the work.

2

Present address: Department of Biology, National Taiwan Normal University; 88, Sec. 4 Tingchou Road, Taipei, Taiwan, R.O.C.

3

To whom correspondence should be addressed. Fax: (734) 647–0884. E-mail: [email protected].