The calcium dependent Calpain proteases are modulatory enzymes with important roles in cell cycle control, development and immunity. In the fly model Calpain A cleaves Cactus/IkappaB and consequently modifies Toll signals during embryonic dorsal-ventral (DV) patterning. Here we explore the role of Calpains in the hemiptera , an intermediate germband insect where the Bone Morphogenetic Protein (BMP) instead of the Toll pathway plays a major role in DV patterning. Phylogenetic analysis of Calpains in species ranging from Isoptera to Diptera indicates an increase of Calpain sequences in the genome and other hemimetabolous species. One locus encoding each of the and families, and seven Calpain A/B loci are present in the genome. Several predicted Calpains display a unique architecture, such as loss of Calcium-binding EF-hand domains and loss of catalytic residues in the active site CysPc domain, yielding catalytically dead Calpains A/B. Knockdown for one of these inactive Calpains results in embryonic DV patterning defects, with expansion of ventral and lateral gene expression domains and consequent failure of germ band elongation. In conclusion, our results reveal that Calpains may exert a conserved function in insect DV patterning, despite the changing role of the Toll and BMP pathways in defining gene expression territories along the insect DV axis.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11387712 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cris.2024.100094 | DOI Listing |
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