Candidate Gene Screen in the Red Flour Beetle Tribolium Reveals Six3 as Ancient Regulator of Anterior Median Head and Central Complex Development

2011 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Candidate Gene Screen in the Red Flour Beetle Tribolium Reveals Six3 as Ancient Regulator of Anterior Median Head and Central Complex Development​
Posnien, N. ; Koniszewski, N. D. B.; Hein, H. J. & Bucher, G.​ (2011) 
PLoS Genetics7(12) art. e1002416​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1002416 

Documents & Media

journal.pgen.1002416.pdf7.02 MBAdobe PDF

License

Published Version

Attribution 2.5 CC BY 2.5

Details

Authors
Posnien, Nico ; Koniszewski, Nikolaus Dieter Bernhard; Hein, Hendrikje Jeannette; Bucher, Gregor
Abstract
Several highly conserved genes play a role in anterior neural plate patterning of vertebrates and in head and brain patterning of insects. However, head involution in Drosophila has impeded a systematic identification of genes required for insect head formation. Therefore, we use the red flour beetle Tribolium castaneum in order to comprehensively test the function of orthologs of vertebrate neural plate patterning genes for a function in insect head development. RNAi analysis reveals that most of these genes are indeed required for insect head capsule patterning, and we also identified several genes that had not been implicated in this process before. Furthermore, we show that Tc-six3/optix acts upstream of Tc-wingless, Tc-orthodenticle1, and Tc-eyeless to control anterior median development. Finally, we demonstrate that Tc-six3/optix is the first gene known to be required for the embryonic formation of the central complex, a midline-spanning brain part connected to the neuroendocrine pars intercerebralis. These functions are very likely conserved among bilaterians since vertebrate six3 is required for neuroendocrine and median brain development with certain mutations leading to holoprosencephaly.
Issue Date
2011
Status
published
Publisher
Public Library Science
Journal
PLoS Genetics 
ISSN
1553-7390

Reference

Citations


Social Media