MAPK target sites of eyes absent are not required for eye development or survival in Drosophila.

Eyes absent (Eya) is a highly conserved transcription cofactor and protein phosphatase that plays an essential role in eye development and survival in Drosophila. Ectopic eye induction assays using cDNA transgenes have suggested that mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) activates Eya by phosphory...

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Main Authors: Barbara Jusiak, Abuduaini Abulimiti, Nele Haelterman, Rui Chen, Graeme Mardon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3520925?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-80dba8d86508409f9db50db75e3b4b0a2020-11-25T01:33:20ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01712e5077610.1371/journal.pone.0050776MAPK target sites of eyes absent are not required for eye development or survival in Drosophila.Barbara JusiakAbuduaini AbulimitiNele HaeltermanRui ChenGraeme MardonEyes absent (Eya) is a highly conserved transcription cofactor and protein phosphatase that plays an essential role in eye development and survival in Drosophila. Ectopic eye induction assays using cDNA transgenes have suggested that mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) activates Eya by phosphorylating it on two consensus target sites, S402 and S407, and that this activation potentiates the ability of Eya to drive eye formation. However, this mechanism has never been tested in normal eye development. In the current study, we generated a series of genomic rescue transgenes to investigate how loss- and gain-of-function mutations at these two MAPK target sites within Eya affect Drosophila survival and normal eye formation: eya(+)GR, the wild-type control; eya(SA)GR, which lacks phosphorylation at the two target residues; and eya(SDE)GR, which contains phosphomimetic amino acids at the same two residues. Contrary to the previous studies in ectopic eye development, all eya genomic transgenes tested rescue both eye formation and survival equally effectively. We conclude that, in contrast to ectopic eye formation, MAPK-mediated phosphorylation of Eya on S402 and S407 does not play a role in normal development. This is the first study in Drosophila to evaluate the difference in outcomes between genomic rescue and ectopic cDNA-based overexpression of the same gene. These findings indicate similar genomic rescue strategies may prove useful for re-evaluating other long-standing Drosophila developmental models.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3520925?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Barbara Jusiak
Abuduaini Abulimiti
Nele Haelterman
Rui Chen
Graeme Mardon
spellingShingle Barbara Jusiak
Abuduaini Abulimiti
Nele Haelterman
Rui Chen
Graeme Mardon
MAPK target sites of eyes absent are not required for eye development or survival in Drosophila.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Barbara Jusiak
Abuduaini Abulimiti
Nele Haelterman
Rui Chen
Graeme Mardon
author_sort Barbara Jusiak
title MAPK target sites of eyes absent are not required for eye development or survival in Drosophila.
title_short MAPK target sites of eyes absent are not required for eye development or survival in Drosophila.
title_full MAPK target sites of eyes absent are not required for eye development or survival in Drosophila.
title_fullStr MAPK target sites of eyes absent are not required for eye development or survival in Drosophila.
title_full_unstemmed MAPK target sites of eyes absent are not required for eye development or survival in Drosophila.
title_sort mapk target sites of eyes absent are not required for eye development or survival in drosophila.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Eyes absent (Eya) is a highly conserved transcription cofactor and protein phosphatase that plays an essential role in eye development and survival in Drosophila. Ectopic eye induction assays using cDNA transgenes have suggested that mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) activates Eya by phosphorylating it on two consensus target sites, S402 and S407, and that this activation potentiates the ability of Eya to drive eye formation. However, this mechanism has never been tested in normal eye development. In the current study, we generated a series of genomic rescue transgenes to investigate how loss- and gain-of-function mutations at these two MAPK target sites within Eya affect Drosophila survival and normal eye formation: eya(+)GR, the wild-type control; eya(SA)GR, which lacks phosphorylation at the two target residues; and eya(SDE)GR, which contains phosphomimetic amino acids at the same two residues. Contrary to the previous studies in ectopic eye development, all eya genomic transgenes tested rescue both eye formation and survival equally effectively. We conclude that, in contrast to ectopic eye formation, MAPK-mediated phosphorylation of Eya on S402 and S407 does not play a role in normal development. This is the first study in Drosophila to evaluate the difference in outcomes between genomic rescue and ectopic cDNA-based overexpression of the same gene. These findings indicate similar genomic rescue strategies may prove useful for re-evaluating other long-standing Drosophila developmental models.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3520925?pdf=render
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