Epithelial polarity and cell separation in the neoplastic l(1)dlg-1 mutant of Drosophila.
Lethal (1) discs-large-1 [l(1)dlg-1] is a non-epithelial overgrowth or neoplastic mutant of Drosophila, which results in tumor-like imaginal discs and enlarged larvae that never pupariate. In an ultrastructural analysis we found that the wing discs develop convoluted monolayers of epithelial cells characterized by well-defined apical-basal polarity and that these layered cells secrete large amounts of basement membrane material. Immuno-EM indicates that Drosophila laminin and collagen are components of this matrix. Late in development clusters or 'rosettes' of separated cells lacking cell-cell junctions and apical-basal polarity form. In in vitro culture experiments l(1)dlg-1 wing discs did not respond to a pulse of exogenous ecdysone by secreting cuticle or losing basement membrane as normal discs do. Our observations are consistent with the hypothesis that cell-cell interaction and communication is required for termination of disc cell proliferation, which must occur prior to a cellular response to ecdysone.[1]References
- Epithelial polarity and cell separation in the neoplastic l(1)dlg-1 mutant of Drosophila. Abbott, L.A., Natzle, J.E. Mech. Dev. (1992) [Pubmed]
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