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The role actin filaments play in providing the characteristic curved form of Drosophila bristles. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Drosophila bristles are shaped and oriented due to influences from surrounding cells, particularly the socket cell and nerve dendrite which guide bristle development.
  • The curvature of the bristles is initially more pronounced at the base and changes as the pupal development progresses, influenced by the inner pupal case.
  • The actin cytoskeleton plays a crucial role in maintaining this curvature by ensuring that the actin bundles on the superior side of the bristles are longer, which is essential for proper bristle formation, as evidenced by the curvature changes observed in mutant bristles.

Article Abstract

Drosophila bristles display a precise orientation and curvature. An asymmetric extension of the socket cell overlies the newly emerging bristle rudiment to provide direction for bristle elongation, a process thought to be orchestrated by the nerve dendrite lying between these cells. Scanning electron microscopic analysis of individual bristles showed that curvature is planar and far greater near the bristle base. Correlated with this, as development proceeds the pupa gradually recedes from the inner pupal case (an extracellular layer that encloses the pupa) leading to less bristle curvature along the shaft. We propose that the inner pupal case induces elongating bristles to bend when they contact this barrier. During elongation the actin cytoskeleton locks in this curvature by grafting together the overlapping modules that comprise the long filament bundles. Because the bristle is curved, the actin bundles on the superior side must be longer than those on the inferior side. This is accomplished during grafting by greater elongation of superior side modules. Poor actin cross-bridging in mutant bristles results in altered curvature. Thus, the pattern of bristle curvature is a product of both extrinsic factors-the socket cell and the inner pupal case--and intrinsic factors--actin cytoskeleton assembly.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC532027PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.e04-06-0472DOI Listing

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