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2007 DROSOPHILA IMAGE AWARD
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2007 WINNER
The adult Drosophila midgut, like the vertebrate intestine, is
made up of enterocytes (digestive cells) and hormone producing enteroendocrine
cells. Previously stem cells had not been described in flies and
Drosophila intestinal cells had thought to be relatively stable.
A eight-cell intestinal stem cell clone made up of a single stem cell
(asterisk), recent stem cell daughter (adjacent to the stem cell), two
enteroendocrine cells (arrowheads), and one early enterocyte and three mature
enterocytes (larger nuclei). Clone (green), cell membranes (red),
enteroendocrine cells (nuclear, red), nucleus (blue).
This clone and ones like it , demonstrate for the first time the existence of
multipotent intestinal stem cells in Drosophila. The ability to easily identify
stem cells and to manipulate them genetically will facilitate the analysis of
normal and abnormal intestinal function in both Drosophila and vertebrates .
Benjamin Ohlstein and Allan Spradling.
The adult Drosophila posterior midgut is maintained by pluripotent stem cells.
Nature, vol, 439, 470-473 (2006). |
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2007 RUNNER-UP
In the fly retina an epithelial lumen, called the
interrhabdomeral space, forms between the photoreceptor cells. The
interrhabdomeral space has a critical function in vision as it optically
isolates individual photoreceptor cells. These confocal images of an adult
ommatidium show that the secretion of the proteoglycan Eyes shut (red) is
essential for opening up a lumen between the photoreceptor cells. Eyes shut
(red) is localized exclusively to the interrhabdomeral space, which is bounded
by the stalk membrane (labeled with Crumbs in green) and the rhabdomeres
(stained for F-actin in blue).
Husain, N., Pellikka, M., Hong, H., Klimentova, T., Choe,
K-M., Clandinin, T.R, and U. Tepass. (2006) The Agrin/Perlecan-related protein
Eyes Shut is essential for epithelial lumen formation in the Drosophila
retina. Developmental Cell 11: 483-493 |
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2007 RUNNER-UP
Mechanisms that create characteristic left-right asymmetry are
largely unknown in invertebrate. To identify genes involved in left-right
asymmetry of Drosophila embryonic gut, we performed a genetic screen. The
embryonic gut is composed of three major parts, the foregut, midgut, and hindgut
(a, c). We found that 75.7% of homozygous Myo31DFsouther embryos show
synchronous inversion of the hindgut and midgut (b, d). In contrast, the
handedness of the foregut was normal in all cases examined, indicating that this
phenotype was heterotaxia (d). It is suggested that Myo31DF is crucial
for generating left-right asymmetry of Drosophila embryonic gut. Myo31DF
encodes an unconventional myosin, Drosophila ortholog of Myosin ID.
Shunya Hozumi, Reo Maeda, Kiichiro Taniguchi, Maiko Kanai,
Syuichi Shirakabe, Takeshi sasamura, Pauline Spéder, Stéphane Noselli, Toshiro
Aigaki, Ryutaro Murakami, Kenji Matsuno.
An unconventional myosin in Drosophila reverses the default
handedness in visceral organs.
Nature 440, 798-802 (2006). |
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2007 RUNNER-UP
Salivary glands of Drosophila larvae contain giant
polytene chromosomes whose characteristic banded structure is readily visible by
light microscopy. Usually these chromosomes are visualized by breaking the
nuclei and “spreading” the chromosomes in two dimensions. Using two-photon
laser-scanning microscopy, these chromosomes can be examined in living salivary
gland tissue in 3D and in real time. The above image is 3D-reconstructed views
of polytene nuclei where DNA is stained red and the transcription factor HSF is
shown green, before (top) and after (bottom) heat shock. This technique reveals
the dynamics of the interaction between DNA and a model transcription factor,
and can be employed to study the transcriptional mechanisms of endogenous genes
in living tissues.
Jie Yao, Katherine Munson, Watt Webb, and John Lis (2006).
Dynamics of heat shock factor association with native gene loci in living cells.
Nature 442, 1050-1053. |
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2007 FINALIST
During germband extension in the Drosophila embryo, global
planar polarities such as Bazooka (green) and Myosin II (red) produce locally
coordinated cell rearrangements. Vertically arranged groups of cells contract
internal cell interfaces to produce circular rosettes. These rosettes then
resolve into horizontally elongated arrays, driving tissue elongation during
convergent extension in the fly.
Blankenship JT, Backovic ST, Sanny JS, Weitz O, Zallen JA.
Multicellular rosette formation links planar cell polarity to tissue
morphogenesis. Dev Cell 11:459-70 (2006). |
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2007 FINALIST
When living precellular embryos are oriented with their
anterior end up and centrifuged, major organelles (lipid droplets, Golgi, ER,
mitochondria and yolk) accumulate at distinct locations, resulting in consistent
stratification in bright light. A GFP fusion of the histone variant H2Av is
massively enriched in the droplet layer, revealing a surprising recruitment of
certain histones to lipid droplets.
Silvia Cermelli, Yi Guo, Steven P. Gross, and Michael A. Welte
The lipid-droplet proteome reveals that droplets are a protein storage depot.
Curr. Biol. 16:1783-1795 (2006)
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2007 FINALIST
A central question in olfaction is how odorant responses are
represented in the brain. In this figure, the response properties of odorant
receptors to a panel of over 100 odors were measured and then mapped onto
glomeruli in the antennal lobe. Each glomerulus is color-coded based on the
response properties of the receptor expressed in its presynaptic ORN population.
The figure shows that receptors with similar response properties often project
to widely dispersed glomeruli, and receptors with very different response
properties often project to neighboring glomeruli.
Elissa A. Hallem and John R. Carlson. 2006. Coding of odors by
a receptor repertoire. Cell 125: 143-160.
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2007 FINALIST
Body pigmentation is a rapidly evolving trait among Drosophila.
Pigmentation of the posterior male abdomen recently evolved in the
melanogaster species group. Frequent losses of male-specific pigmentation
are observed in several lineages of the melanogaster species group,
including D. santomea, D. kikkawai, and D. bipectinata. We
infer that Abdominal-B Hox function has been co-opted to gain
male-specific pigmentation at least in a common ancestor of the melanogaster
species group. We further suggest three different mechanisms underlying the
loss of male-specific pigmentation in different monomorphic lineages that
descended from a common ancestor with male-specific pigmentation.
Sangyun Jeong, Antonis Rokas, and Sean B. Carroll.
Regulation of body pigmentation by the Abdominal-B Hox protein and its gain and
loss in Drosophila evolution.
Cell 125, 1387-1399 (2006). |
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2007 FINALIST
During the last mitotic interphase before gastrulation (stage
5), nuclei do not form three groups of distinct packing density as previously
thought. Instead, the heat map on the bottom left shows a complex pattern of
nuclear densities which varies continuously along both the a/p and d/v axes. The
plot on the bottom right shows the same isodensity contours overlaid on the
expression patterns of the genes snail (red) and even-skipped
(green), revealing a complex relationship between gene expression and density.
Both plots are cylindrical projections as explained on the top of the figure.
Both the density and expression patterns have been averaged over 294 embryos.
Luengo Hendriks CL, Keränen SVE, Fowlkes CC, Simirenko L,
Weber GH, DePace AH, Henriquez CN, Kaszuba DW, Hamann B, Eisen MB, Malik J,
Sudar D, Biggin MD and Knowles DW.
3D morphology and gene expression in the Drosophila blastoderm at cellular
resolution I: data acquisition pipeline
Genome Biology, 7:R123, 2006. |
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2007 FINALIST
A. In Drosophila larval ovaries, somatic cells (red) and germ
cells (green) interact and influence each other. A special group of somatic
cells intermingles with germ cells (arrows). Intermingled cells and germ cells
interact via a feedback loop containing a positive and a negative signal: The
survival of Intermingled cells depends on Spitz, which is produced by germ
cells. In return, Intermingled cells repress germ cell proliferation in an EGFR
dependent manner.
B. Reducing EGFR signaling in somatic cells results in loss of Intermingled
cells. This, in turn, increases the number of germ cells. The feedback
loop is able to sense the number of germ cells and respond to keep their numbers
within normal limits. It is therefore a homeostatic feedback loop that
allows the organ to coordinate the growth of different cell populations.
Lilach Gilboa and Ruth Lehmann (2006)
Soma-germline interactions coordinate homeostasis and growth in the Drosophila
gonad.
Nature, 443(7107):97-100. |
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2007 FINALIST
It is not possible to compare the expression of more than a
handful of genes at once on a physical model of an embryo by using a different
color to represent each gene because with too many genes the patterns overlap
and colors mix. To overcome this limitation, we have adapted parallel
coordinates, shown on the top panel, to represent and compare expression of
multiple genes. In this parallel coordinates view, each gene is represented by a
parallel vertical axis. The level of expression of one gene in one cell defines
one point on a parallel axis. Connecting points for each cell on each axis
results in zigzag lines, one zigzag line for each cell. In this example, the
lines are colored according to the level of expression of the hkb gene.
Below the parallel coordinate view, the locations of cells expressing hkb
at the highest levels are shown on a physical model of the embryo. In the
parallel coordinates, it can be readily seen that cells that express hkb
at high levels express eve, ftz, sna and slp at low
levels and tll at high levels. Although this illustration only compares
nine gene’s expression, it is simple to display and compare data for tens of
genes at once with further parallel vertical axes.
Rübel, O., Weber, G.H., Keranen, S.V.E., Fowlkes, C.C., Luengo
Hendriks, C.L., Simirenko, L., Shah, N.Y., Eisen, M.B., Biggin, M.D., Hagen, H.,
Sudar, J.D., Malik, J., Knowles, D.W. and Hamann, B. (2006), PointCloudXplore:
Visual analysis of 3D gene expression data using physical views and parallel
coordinates, in: Sousa Santos, B., Ertl, T. and Joy, K.I., eds., Data
Visualization 2006 (Proceedings of EuroVis 2006), Eurographics Association, Aire-la-Ville,
Switzerland, pp. 203-210. |
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