Role of cortical tumour-suppressor
proteins in asymmetric division of Drosophila neuroblast
Ohshiro T, Yagami T, Zhang C and Matsuzaki F
Nature 408(6812):593-6 (2000)
SUMMARY
Cellular diversity during development arises in part from asymmetric divisions,
which generate two distinct cells by transmitting localized determinants
from a progenitor cell into one daughter cell. In Drosophila, neuroblasts
undergo typical asymmetric divisions to produce another neuroblast and
a ganglion mother cell. At mitosis, neural fate determinants, including
Prospero and Numb, localize to the basal cortex, from which the ganglion
mother cell buds off; Inscuteable and Bazooka, which regulate spindle
orientation, localize apically. Here we show that a tumour-suppressor
protein, Lethal giant larvae (Lgl), is essential for asymmetric cortical
localization of all basal determinants in mitotic neuroblasts, and is
therefore indispensable for neural fate decisions. Lgl, which itself is
uniformly cortical, interacts with several types of Myosin to localize
the determinants. Another tumour-suppressor protein, Lethal discs large
(Dlg), participates in this process by regulating the localization of
Lgl. The localization of the apical components is unaffected in lgl or
dlg mutants. Thus, Lgl and Dlg act in a common process that differentially
mediates cortical protein targeting in mitotic neuroblasts, and that creates
intrinsic differences between daughter cells.
LINK
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=11117747